Katana VentraIP

Volcano Entertainment

Volcano Entertainment (sometimes referred to as Volcano Records) is an American all-round music record label founded in 1996 which released albums by Tool, 311, Size 14, Survivor and "Weird Al" Yankovic. (The latter two were former Scotti Bros. Records artists and the only artists retained from that label.) The Volcano Records catalog is owned by RCA Records, a division of Sony Music Entertainment.

Volcano Entertainment

Independent (1996-1998)
Zomba Recording Corporation (1998-2003)
Q Prime (1998-2000)
BMG (2003-2004)
Sony BMG Music Entertainment (2004-2008)
Sony Music Entertainment (2008-present)

Kevin Czinger

Dormant

Sony Music
(In the US)
RCA Records
(Outside the US)
Legacy Recordings
(Reissues)

History[edit]

Volcano Records was founded in 1996 by Kevin Czinger.[1][2] It is essentially the continuation of Zoo Entertainment which Czinger bought from BMG in 1996.[1] Initially, the company was meant to have two divisions Zoo/Volcano and Volcano which would be a hip-hop imprint.[3] The first album released with the new ownership was Tool's album Ænima followed by actor Keanu Reeves' band Dogstar's album Our Little Visionary. However, the Zoo name was eventually phased out and many of Zoo artists became the cornerstone of the Volcano roster.


In October 1997, Volcano merged with Dallas Austin's Rowdy Records to become Freeworld Entertainment.[4] Freeworld was short-lived, as the label was plagued with financial trouble and the relationship with Austin faltered.[5][6] Many of the label's employees were either cut or left.[7] Additionally, the label's flagship artist Tool was attempting to leave the label which resulted in a lengthy lawsuit.[8]


In the spring of 1998, Freeworld was purchased and "saved" by the Zomba Label Group. Though the Zoo branding was briefly reintroduced, Zomba quickly returned the Volcano moniker, abandoning Zoo altogether.[9][10] A month later, Q Prime, led by top managers Cliff Burnstein and Peter Mensch, purchased a 50% stake in Volcano and made sure that hard-rock artist Tool would stay.[11] They would sell their share back to Zomba in the early 2000s.


1998 also marked the year that Volcano acquired the contracts and masters of Scotti Bros. Records which had just been purchased by Pearson PLC. Volcano also purchased Capricorn Records in December 2000.[12]


In 2002, Zomba was purchased by BMG, returning Volcano to the BMG umbrella it had previously been a part of as Zoo Entertainment in the early nineties.[13] Volcano now controls the Scotti Bros. Records, Capricorn Records (later) and Zoo Entertainment catalogs.


With Yankovic fulfilling his Sony contract on their main label RCA, with his 2014 album Mandatory Fun, Volcano functions primarily as a reissue label. Tool released its contract fulfillment album for Volcano, Fear Inoculum, on August 30, 2019, through Tool Dissectional/Volcano/RCA, completing their five-album requirement.[14]

List of record labels

Zoo Entertainment

Freeworld Entertainment