Craig Balsam | |
---|---|
Education | Emory University, NYU School of Law |
Notable work | Elise Euckland, KIDZ BOP |
Title | Music Executive / Theatrical Producer |
Craig Balsam is an American entertainment industry entrepreneur, Tony Award-winning theatrical producer and film producer. [1] He is co-founder of the New York City-based independent music company Razor & Tie as well as the children's music brand Kidz Bop. [2]
After earning a juris doctor degree at NYU School of Law and practicing in New York corporate firms in the late 1980s, Balsam and his friend Cliff Chenfeld co-founded an independent music company. Named for the required uniform of the lucrative profession that they left behind, Razor & Tie went on to sell over 40 million units, generate billions of streams and win multiple Grammy Awards. [3] Balsam and Chenfeld owned and operated indie Razor & Tie for almost 30 years and completed a sale of the business in late 2018 to Concord Music. [4] [5]
During that 30-year period, Razor & Tie became one of the largest privately owned labels and publishing companies in North America. [6] The label's first release in 1990, a nostalgic compilation titled “The 70s Preservation Society Presents Those Fabulous 70s,” proved a multi-million-selling blockbuster and was followed by a series of hugely popular music compilations and DVDs, including “Disco Fever,” “Totally 80s,” “Monsters of Rock,” “Monster Ballads,” “Darrin’s Dance Grooves” and many others. [7] The unprecedented success of these and other compilations and the creation of its own in-house media buying business (Razor & Tie Media) created one of the largest independent direct response music companies in the United States. [8]
In the early 90s, Razor & Tie began a reissue label, releasing on CD hundreds of classic albums and career retrospectives by a range of landmark artists, including Glen Campbell, King Curtis, the Partridge Family, Don Covay, James Carr, Merle Haggard, among many others. [10] In ensuing years, an eclectic roster of artists were signed to the label’s new music division, including such icons as Jon Batiste, The Pretty Reckless, Joan Baez, Graham Parker, Marshall Crenshaw, Dar Williams, All That Remains, and Brand New. In 2014, Razor & Tie launched the Washington Square imprint, showcasing a number of indie and alternative artists. [11]
Razor & Tie Music Publishing launched in 2007, a songwriter-friendly and service-oriented division with an aggressive approach to multi-media song placement, royalty administration and artist and writer career development — Razor & Tie Publishing quickly became a successful indie music publisher with number one hits across several genres and a robust synch business. [12]
In 2001, Balsam co-founded, with Chenfeld, the #1 children’s music brand KIDZ BOP, featuring today’s biggest pop hits "sung by kids for kids." [13] The children's music phenomenon has sold tens of millions of albums and generated billions of streams since its debut in 2001, with several successful nationwide Kidz Bop Live shows along the way. [14] [15] The best-selling series has had 24 Top 10 debuts on the Billboard 200; only three artists in history—The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and Barbra Streisand—have had more Top 10 albums and KIDZ BOP was named Billboard's "#1 Kids' Artist" for eight consecutive years. [16] [17]
Balsam has served as co-producer on a number of theatrical productions, including the 2019 Tony Award-winner for “Best Musical,” Hadestown , and playwright-actor Heidi Schreck's Tony Award-nominated What the Constitution Means to Me, a finalist for the 2019 Pulitzer Prize for Drama and winner of the New York Drama Critics' Circle “Best American Play” of 2019. [18] In 2020, Balsam was a lead producer presenting the first Broadway production of Martin McDonagh's Hangmen, which won the 2016 Olivier Award for “Best New Play." [19] [20] [21]
Balsam has also served as executive producer on a number of films, including 2009's Joan Baez: How Sweet The Sound, a comprehensive documentary produced in association with WNET for PBS’ American Masters series, 2014's musical romantic comedy-drama The Last Five Years , co-starring Anna Kendrick and Jeremy Jordan, and 2016's Women Who Kill . [22] [23] [24]
Balsam was born in Newark, New Jersey [ citation needed ] and grew up in Millburn, New Jersey. [25] He has a BA from Emory University and a JD from NYU School of Law. [26] He and his wife Jodi Balsam, a Professor of Clinical Law and Director of Externship Programs at Brooklyn Law School, live in Manhattan and have three grown children.
Monument Records is an American record label co-founded in 1958 by Fred Foster. Originally founded in Washington, D.C., the label moved to Nashville, Tennessee in 1960, and experienced success over the next two decades with a number of artists including Roy Orbison, Dolly Parton, Willie Nelson, Ray Stevens, Kris Kristofferson, Charlie McCoy, Boots Randolph, Jeannie Seely and others.
Dorothy Snowden "Dar" Williams is an American pop folk singer-songwriter from Mount Kisco, New York. Hendrik Hertzberg of The New Yorker has described Williams as "one of America's very best singer-songwriters."
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Rounder Records is an independent record label founded in 1970 in Somerville, Massachusetts by Marian Leighton Levy, Ken Irwin, and Bill Nowlin. Focused on American roots music, Rounder's catalogue of more than 3000 titles includes records by Alison Krauss and Union Station, George Thorogood, Tony Rice, and Béla Fleck, in addition to re-releases of seminal albums by artists such as the Carter Family, Jelly Roll Morton, Lead Belly, and Woody Guthrie. "Championing and preserving the music of artists whose music falls outside of the mainstream," Rounder releases have won 54 Grammy Awards representing diverse genres, from bluegrass, folk, reggae, and gospel to pop, rock, Americana, polka and world music. Acquired by Concord in 2010, Rounder is based in Nashville, Tennessee. In 2016, The Rounder Founders were inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame.
Charlie McCoy is an American harmonica virtuoso and multi-instrumentalist in country music. He is best known for his harmonica solos on iconic recordings such as "Candy Man", "He Stopped Loving Her Today", "I Was Country When Country Wasn't Cool", and others. He was a member of the progressive country rock bands Area Code 615 and Barefoot Jerry. After recording with Bob Dylan in New York, McCoy is credited for unknowingly influencing Dylan to decide to come to Nashville to record the critically acclaimed 1966 album "Blonde on Blonde".
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"You're a Mean One, Mr. Grinch" is a Christmas song that was originally written and composed for the 1966 animated special Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas!.
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Wally Wilson, is an American record producer and songwriter music publisher and concert producer based in Nashville.
Razor & Tie was an American entertainment company that consisted of a record label and a music publishing company. It was established in 1990 by Craig Balsam and Cliff Chenfeld. Based in New York City, Razor & Tie releases were distributed by Universal Music Group.
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Kidz Bop is an American children's music group that produces family-friendly covers of pop songs and related media. Kidz Bop releases compilation albums that feature children covering songs that chart high on the Billboard Hot 100 and/or receive heavy airplay from contemporary hit radio stations several months ahead of each album's release. Their cover versions sometimes contain lyrics with substitutes for the lyrics' original profanity.
Cathy Lee "Catt" Gravitt is an American songwriter based in Nashville, Tennessee. In the music business for over 20 years, she signed on as a writer with her current publishing company, Razor and Tie, in 2008. Gravitt has songwriting credits in multiple genres and has written songs with or for several artists including Kid Rock, Kelly Clarkson, Kelsea Ballerini, Jake Owen, Vince Gill and Natalie Grant, among others. In 2012, she won the SESAC Songwriter of the Year award. Gravitt most recently won the Canadian Country Music Association's 2018 Songwriter(s) of the Year award, along with co-writers Skip Black and Aaron Goodvin, for the song "Lonely Drum", performed by Aaron Goodvin.
Lift a Sail is the ninth studio album by American rock band Yellowcard. This was the band's first album without drummer Longineu W. Parsons III, who left the band in March 2014.
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