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Luke Records is an American record label formed in 1985 by Luther Campbell, the former producer and hypeman of 2 Live Crew, [1] and David Chackler, and based in Miami, Florida. It was one of the first recording labels devoted almost exclusively to Southern hip-hop .
Kemosabe Records is an American record label founded by record producer Dr. Luke in 2011. It was launched as an imprint of RCA Records , a division of Sony Music Entertainment . Based in Los Angeles, California , the label has signed acts including Doja Cat , Kesha , Becky G , Juicy J , R. City , Lil Bibby , G.R.L. , LunchMoney Lewis , and Yelle .
Campbell and his label, Luke Records, Inc. went bankrupt in 1995 and sold their catalogs to Joseph Weinberger and Lil' Joe Records, Inc. in 1996. Uncle Luke was released on May 14, 1996, on Luther Campbell Music and was mainly produced by Darren "DJ Spin" Rudnick, and Rod XL, with additional production by Frankie Cutlass, Ice Cube and Doug E ...
The news comes six months after the singer settled multiple lawsuits with her former producer and label owner Dr. Luke, which stretched over nearly 10 years but were settled out of court in June.
In December 2023, Variety reported Kesha's contract officially ended with Dr. Luke's label, Kemosabe, which is distributed by RCA Records. She also parted ways with her longtime manager.
The “Praying” singer left the record label after she and Dr. Luke, 50, settled their defamation case in June 2023. Back in 2014, Kesha alleged that she was assaulted by Dr. Luke in 2005 after ...
Topics about Luke Records albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories This category contains studio albums released on the Luke Records label. Please move any non-studio albums to an appropriate subcategory per WikiProject Albums guidelines .
Campbell changed his stage name to Luke (and changed the record label's name to Luke Records) [16] and the group released an extremely political follow-up album, Banned in the U.S.A., [16] after obtaining permission to use an interpolation of Bruce Springsteen's "Born in the U.S.A.". Banned in the U.S.A. was the group's fourth album.