FFRR

British record label

Parent label: FFRR Records Ltd.·United KingdomUnited Kingdom

ffrrecords.comlabelsbase.net

Dance music-focused imprint founded as Full Frequency Range Recordings in 1986 under the umbrella of London Records with Pete Tong as A&R and Phil Howells as assistant. Early releases included Lil Louis' French Kiss, D Mob's We Call It Acieed and Salt-N-Pepa's Push It. Albums from Orbital, Goldie and All Saints followed in the 1990s. Nick Raphael (2) started at the label as product manager and later became label manager. In 1979 when Polygram Records purchased the ailing Decca Record company, London was just another document trademark gathering dust. Upon its revival and rebirth three years later it took up where it had left off, licensing young black American acts (New Edition, Rockers Revenge) and founding its own roster beginning with Blancmange and Bananarama. At the time what differentiated London from other "Major" record companies was its incredibly high proportion of chart entries and the esteem in which it held the then scorned "dance music". With the development of the London roster and the addition of rock acts such as the Hothouse Flowers and Then Jericho there was a danger that the dance focus of the early London would be lost, and a decision has been taken to separate the company into two labels, FFRR and London. The original FFRR was a trademark of Decca. It was launched in 1947 to mark the advent of a new era in high fidelity sound, and it was later incorporated into the London logo. The new (1987–present) FFRR is an independent dance label under the guidance of Head of A&R Pete Tong, responsible for continuing the great tradition of dance music at London Records. Although the company name FFRR Records Ltd. first appeared on releases in 1986, the standard London logos were used until 1987. Such releases, even if they have an old-style "ffrr" badge embedded in the London logos, should only be filed under London Records. A new logo for the dance imprint first appeared on releases in 1987. It incorporated elements of the classic "ffrr" high-fidelity marks that had been part of the Decca and London branding since the 1940s, yet it is a unique logo, with a key difference being that it normally appears by itself and contains the words Full Frequency Range Recordings (not Recording, and not American Recordings or British Recordings). The ffrr high-fidelity mark (normally paired with a London or Decca logo) is not catalogued in the database as a distinct label or series; for releases with that branding, please only enter the label as London Records or Decca as appropriate, and mention ffrr in the release notes. From 1990 on, the imprint was affiliated with both FFRR Records Ltd and former immediate parent London Records 90 Ltd.. Pete Tong relaunched the label in 2011 and it now sits as a sub label of Parlophone within the wider Warner Music Group. Label head from October 2019 to April 2024: Andy Daniell, with Evie Grain (ex-BMG) as marketing lead from 2021. The label was rebranded in February 2021 with an updated logo by Trevor Jackson. DJ on the catalog numbers generally denotes a promo copy. Label code: LC 7654 / LC 07654

Discography

921 albums
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Endtroducing.....

DJ Shadow · 1996

Studio Album

The Raw & The Cooked

Fine Young Cannibals · 1988

Studio Album

In Sides

Orbital · 1996

Studio Album

Bananarama

Bananarama · 1984

Studio Album

Orbital 2

Orbital · 1993

Studio Album

Orbital

Orbital · 1991

Studio Album

Hormonally Yours

Shakespears Sister · 1992

Studio Album

Zucchero

Zucchero · 1990

Studio Album

De La Soul Is Dead

De La Soul · 1991

Studio Album

Timeless

Goldie · 1995

Studio Album

Very Necessary

Salt 'N' Pepa · 1993

Studio Album

U Got 2 Know

Cappella · 1994

Studio Album

Snivilisation

Orbital · 1994

Studio Album

Replugged

U 96 · 1993

Studio Album

The Middle Of Nowhere

Orbital · 1999

Studio Album

It's My Life

Sash! · 1997

Studio Album

The Altogether 5.1

Orbital · 2001

Studio Album

Walthamstow

East 17 · 1992

Studio Album

The Brand New Heavies / Dream Come True (Brand New Mix)

The Brand New Heavies · 1990

Studio Album

People

Hothouse Flowers · 1988

Studio Album

All Hail The Queen

Queen Latifah · 1989

Studio Album

Let It Bee

Voice Of The Beehive · 1988

Studio Album

The Sun Rises In The East

Jeru The Damaja · 1994

Studio Album

Magnified

Failure · 1994

Studio Album

Community Music

Asian Dub Foundation · 2000

Studio Album

Read My Lips

Jimmy Somerville · 1989

Studio Album

A Salt With A Deadly Pepa

Salt 'N' Pepa · 1988

Studio Album

Blacks' Magic

Salt 'N' Pepa · 1990

Studio Album

Sacred Heart

Shakespear's Sister · 1989

Studio Album

Heavy Rhyme Experience: Vol. 1

The Brand New Heavies · 1992

Studio Album

Come Into My Life

Joyce Sims · 1987

Studio Album

Brother Sister

The Brand New Heavies · 1994

Studio Album

Nature Of A Sista'

Queen Latifah · 1991

Studio Album

Hot, Cool & Vicious

Salt 'N' Pepa · 1986

Studio Album

Captain Swing

Michelle Shocked · 1989

Studio Album

Les Saisons - Quatre Concertos Violon Et Orchestre, Opus. 8 N° 1 A 4

Vivaldi - Orchestre De Chambre De Stuttgart, Reinhold Barchet, Karl Munchinger · 1955

Studio Album

Flowermouth

No-Man · 1994

Studio Album

Morning Dove White

One Dove · 1993

Studio Album

Rafi's Revenge

Asian Dub Foundation

Studio Album

Saturnz Return

Goldie · 1998

Studio Album

The Neighborhood

Los Lobos · 1990

Studio Album

Killing Puritans

Armand Van Helden · 2000

Studio Album

Swordfish << The Album >>

Paul Oakenfold · 2001

Studio Album

Back From Hell

Run-DMC · 1990

Studio Album

Critical Beatdown

Ultramagnetic MC's · 1988

Studio Album

A Little Bit Of This, A Little Bit Of That

D Mob · 1989

Studio Album

The Devil Made Me Do It

Paris · 1990

Studio Album

Wrath Of The Math

Jeru The Damaja · 1996

Studio Album