I.R.S. Records Presents The Cutting Edge

Last updated
I.R.S. Records Presents The Cutting Edge
Also known asThe Cutting Edge
Genremusic variety show
Directed by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris
Starring
Country of originUnited States
Production
Producers
  • Jay Boberg
  • Carl Grasso
Running time60 minutes
Original release
Network MTV
ReleaseMarch 1983 (1983-03) 
September 1987 (1987-09)

I.R.S. Records Presents: The Cutting Edge, also known as The Cutting Edge or IRS's The Cutting Edge, is a music program that aired on MTV (US) from March 1983 to September 1987, on the last Sunday of every month. The show was retitled The Cutting Edge Happy Hour in 1987.

Contents

Background

The show was intended to feature performers who might otherwise not be seen on MTV, and featured the earliest appearances on MTV for acts like Madonna, the Red Hot Chili Peppers and R.E.M. [1] The co-founders of I.R.S., Miles Copeland III and Jay Boberg, also saw the program as an effective promotional tool for I.R.S. recording artists at a time when much of the music industry had not yet perceived the marketing value of music videos. [2] Copeland later described himself as "the only record company executive ever to have had his own show on MTV". [3]

Broadcast history

Produced by Jay Boberg and Carl Grasso of I.R.S. Records for MTV, and directed by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris, [4] the first year of the show featured a variety of hosts including Jools Holland, Jeffrey Vallance, and Wazmo Nariz, before settling on Peter Zaremba, the lead singer of the Fleshtones. [5] [ user-generated source ] Interviews with musicians and performances were videotaped in clubs, recording studios and private homes.

As it evolved, the program began to produce programs that focused on regional music scenes around the United States, such as in Winston-Salem, Austin and different neighborhoods around Los Angeles. [6] A 1985 episode filmed in Austin was an important contributor to the brief flourishing of the local "New Sincerity" music scene. [7] [8]

Los Angeles Times critic Terry Atkinson, writing in July 1986, called The Cutting Edge "simply the best program about pop music that we have", with "the most interesting and adventurous new acts". [9]

After a six-month hiatus, the program returned in June 1987 as The Cutting Edge Happy Hour. [10] The renamed show was videotaped at a single location, the Hollywood Holiday Inn. A June 1987 episode presented a wide range of performers from Frank Zappa to Ladysmith Black Mambazo, [11] but overall, the series became more focused on Southern California bands, and lost popularity before ending by September 1987. [5] [ user-generated source ][ dubious ]

Related Research Articles

The Grammy Award for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance was an honor presented at the Grammy Awards, a ceremony established in 1958 and originally called the Gramophone Awards, to female recording artists for quality R&B songs. Awards in several categories are distributed annually by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences of the United States to "honor artistic achievement, technical proficiency and overall excellence in the recording industry, without regard to album sales or chart position."

American Girls were an American all-female band based in California, United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">I.R.S. Records</span> American record label

I.R.S. Records was a major American record label founded by Miles Copeland III, Jay Boberg, and Carl Grasso in 1979. I.R.S. produced some of the most popular bands of the 1980s, and was particularly known for issuing records by college rock, new wave and alternative rock artists, including R.E.M., The Go-Go's, Wall of Voodoo, and Fine Young Cannibals. Currently the label is distributed by parent company Universal Music Group.

Gold Mountain Records was a record label based in New York. It was distributed by A&M Records between 1983 and 1985. After 1985, the distributor was MCA Records.

BlackGirl is an American pop/dance vocal trio consisting of Pam Copeland, Nycolia "Tye-V" Turman, and Rochelle Stuart from Atlanta, that formed in 1992 on the Kaper/RCA/BMG label.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Family Home Entertainment</span> American home video company

Family Home Entertainment (FHE) was an American home video company founded in 1980 by Noel C. Bloom. It was a division of International Video Entertainment, which had its headquarters in Newbury Park, California.

The Alive/Worldwide Tour was a concert tour by American heavy metal band Kiss which began on June 28, 1996 in Detroit, United States and concluded on July 5, 1997 in London, England. It was the first tour with original members Peter Criss and Ace Frehley since the Dynasty Tour in 1979.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cher (concert residency)</span>

Cher was the second concert residency by American singer-actress Cher at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, Nevada. For the three-year engagement, Cher received $60 million. Performing at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace, the first show occurred on May 6, 2008 and the last show was on February 5, 2011. The show included 14 dancers and four aerialists, with a total of 17 costumes designed by Bob Mackie. The residency grossed over $97 million during its three-year run.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Moment of Truth World Tour</span> 1987–88 concert tour by Whitney Houston

The Moment of Truth World Tour was the second worldwide tour by American recording artist Whitney Houston and supported her multi-platinum hit album Whitney. The trek started on July 4, 1987 in North America and continued overseas during 1988 in Europe, Asia and Australia.

The Rapture Tour was the first headlining concert tour by American recording artist Anita Baker in support of her second studio album Rapture (1986). The tour started in mid-March 1986, visiting several cities throughout North America and Europe. In 1987, Baker kicked off a North America second leg trek, which included seven dates in Los Angeles at the Beverly Theatre in January, including two and three-night dates in Merrillville, Indiana, New York City and Miami, Florida. The outing included four sold-out shows scheduled in Washington, D.C., and three consecutive dates for the second visit in Merrillville, Indiana.

The Raised on Radio Tour was a concert tour by the American rock band Journey. The tour was the last with lead singer Steve Perry. It was the only tour with Randy Jackson on bass, while Mike Baird played drums. The band's previous rhythm section, Ross Valory and Steve Smith, were fired during recording sessions for the preceding Raised on Radio album. Valory and Smith, however, received their percentage of the profits from the tour.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Whitney Houston videography</span>

The videography of American recording artist Whitney Houston, nicknamed “The Voice”, consists of fifty-five music videos, four music video compilations, a concert tour video and three music video singles. In 1983, Houston signed a recording contract with Arista Records and two years later released her eponymous debut album. Houston's first music video was for the single "You Give Good Love", which was selected to establish her in the black marketplace first. Houston then released the video of her worldwide hit "Saving All My Love for You". The following video, for the song "How Will I Know", helped introduce the singer to a wider audience when it became one of the first videos by a black female singer to earn heavy rotation on MTV, and it won MTV Video Music Award for Best Female Video at its 3rd ceremony of 1986. "Greatest Love of All", the final single released from Houston's debut album, helped cement the M.O. for the classic Whitney video. In June 1986, Houston released her first video compilation The No. 1 Video Hits, containing her four music videos off the Whitney Houston album. It reached number-one on the Billboard Top Music Videocassettes chart and stayed there for 22 weeks, which remains the all-time record for a video collection by a female artist, it was also certified Platinum for shipments of 100,000 units by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on July 15, 1986. In 1987, Houston released the music video for "I Wanna Dance with Somebody ", the first single from her second album Whitney (1987), which depicts Houston in one of her iconic looks, the clip―towering curly wig, colorful dangly earrings and a series of going-to-the-club outfits. In 1988, the music video for the song "One Moment in Time", the title track off the 1988 Summer Olympics Album: One Moment in Time, was released.

Barry Fasman was an American music producer, songwriter, arranger, composer and orchestral conductor.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eric Clapton videography</span>

The videography of Eric Clapton consists of 22 video albums and concert films as well as 17 music videos. His commercially most successful video releases are the DVDs of his Crossroads Guitar Festival series. His 2007 release sold over two million DVD and Blu-rays to date, making it one of the best-selling music video DVDs ever to be released. The 2004 Crossroads Guitar Festival DVD was certified 10-times Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America. Clapton's video releases are popular all over the world, especially in North and South Armerica, Europe and Oceania. Clapton's small number of music videos are similarly successful. Every music video Clapton has released, has been shown more than 30 weeks in succession on MTV, VH1, MuchMusic, MTV2 and Fuse TV – rarely has any other artist been broadcast that often on a music TV channel throughout their whole career.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Roberta Linn</span> American singer

Roberta Linn is an American singer and entertainer. She is most associated with the Rat Pack and the Las Vegas Strip, where she was a regular performer with Freddie Bell and the Bellboys in the 1950s and 1960s. From 1949 to 1954, she sang with the Lawrence Welk group, "The Champagne Ladies".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">VidAmerica</span> Defunct American media company (1979-1992)

VidAmerica was a home video distributor established in 1979 as a subsidiary of Video Corporation of America and headquartered in New York City, New York. It was set up to pioneer the concept of renting videocassettes through mail, which led to failure where each week, tapes kept disappearing somewhere in the postal system, much to the chagrin of VidAmerica executives as they considered stamping the packages a "nuclear waste" before giving up on long-distance retail.

The Power Windows Tour was a concert tour by Canadian rock band Rush, in support of the band's eleventh studio album Power Windows.

Jay Robert Boberg is an American music, entertainment and viticulture executive. He co-founded the independent record label I.R.S. Records in 1979, and later served as the president of Universal/MCA Music Publishing and the president of MCA Records. He is the founder of the entertainment company Liberation Entertainment and is chairman of the Isolation Entertainment board of directors. In 2013, he co-founded the winery Domaine Nicolas-Jay in Oregon with Méo Camuzet owner and winemaker, Jean-Nicolas Méo.

References

  1. Tannenbaum, Rob; Marks, Craig (2011). I Want My MTV: The Uncensored Story of the Music Video Revolution. Penguin Publishing Group. pp. 317–319. ISBN   978-1-101-52641-5.
  2. Bhidé, Amar V. (2003). The Origin and Evolution of New Businesses. Oxford University Press. p. 105. ISBN   978-0-19-517031-3.
  3. Hay, Carla (July 28, 2001). "Billboard Salutes Twenty Years of MTV". Billboard . Nielsen Business Media, Inc. p. 58. ISSN   0006-2510.
  4. Foti, Laura (March 26, 1983). "Music Monitor". Billboard . Nielsen Business Media, Inc. ISSN   0006-2510.
  5. 1 2 "The Cutting Edge". TV.com. Retrieved 2009-04-20.
  6. McCormick, Moira (September 28, 1985). "Cutting Edge looks at regional scenes". Billboard . Nielsen Business Media, Inc. p. 39. ISSN   0006-2510.
  7. Shank, Barry (2011). Dissonant Identities: The Rock'n'Roll Scene in Austin, Texas. Wesleyan University Press. pp. 157ff, 207ff, & passim. ISBN   978-0-8195-7267-7.
  8. Denberg, Jody (November 1986). "Who Made the Cut". Texas Monthly. Emmis Communications: 180. ISSN   0148-7736.
  9. Atkinson, Terry (July 27, 1986). "MTV Looks More Alive At 5". Los Angeles Times .
  10. Day, Jeffrey (June 19, 1987). "Record reviews provide opening for some of more off-beat bands". The Telegraph via Newspapers.com.
  11. Goldstein, Patrick (June 21, 1987). "Pop Eye". Los Angeles Times.