Sample individual song selections by clicking on titles below:









click on image to view Taj Mahal EPK








Taj Mahal
Maestro

HUCD3164
UPC: 0-53361-31642-6

Release Date: September 30th 2008



Limited Edition 40th Anniversary
Collector’s Double LP
HULP8164

UPC: 0-53361-81641-4




TAJ MAHAL CELEBRATES FOUR DECADES
OF BLUES, ROOTS, REGGAE AND BEYOND


New Album Maestro Includes Guest Appearances By:
Ben Harper, Jack Johnson, Angelique Kidjo, Los Lobos, Ziggy Marley and more

Also Available On Limited Edition 40th Anniversary Collector’s Double LP

The mythology of American blues is filled with images of the lone musician standing at the crossroads, caught in that gray area between light and shadow, cutting impossible deals with dark forces, offering up nothing less than his soul as collateral.

Composer and multi-instrumentalist Taj Mahal, a two-time GRAMMY® winner and one of the most influential American blues and roots artists of the past half-century, has made no Faustian deals in his long and distinguished career, but he stands at an important crossroads nonetheless. In his never-ending exploration of the complex origins and underpinnings of American music, he has forged a four-decade career by gathering and distilling countless musical traditions from a range of geographical and cultural sources: the Mississippi Delta, the Appalachian backwoods, the African continent, the Hawaiian islands, Europe, the Caribbean and so much more. Taj Mahal doesn’t just stand at the crossroads. He is the crossroads.

On September 30, 2008, he makes his Heads Up International debut with the worldwide release of Maestro (HUCD 3164). This twelve-track set – his first U.S. release in five years – marks the fortieth anniversary of Taj’s rich and varied recording career by mixing original material with chestnuts from vintage sources and newcomers alike. Guests on this anniversary gala include Ben Harper, Jack Johnson, Angelique Kidjo, Los Lobos, Ziggy Marley and others – many of whom have been directly influenced by Taj’s music and guidance.

read more


Photos

Download Artist Photo 1 Download Artist Photo 2
Download Artist Photo 3 Download Artist Photo 4




back to top



Download Assets:
  1. Download hi-res album cover (with sticker)
  2. Download hi-res album cover (with no sticker)
  3. Download artist photo 1
  4. Download artist photo 2
  5. Download artist photo 3
  6. Download artist photo 4
  7. Download profile (.doc)
  8. Download press release (.doc)
  9. Contact us
  10. International Partners


Track Listing:
  1. Scratch My Back
  2. Never Let You Go
  3. Dust Me Down
  4. Further On Down The Road
  5. Black Man, Brown Man
  6. Zanzibar
  7. TV Mama
  8. I Can Make You Happy
  9. Slow Drag
  10. Hello Josephine
  11. Strong Man Holler
  12. Diddy Wah Diddy

back to top



TAJ MAHAL CELEBRATES FOUR DECADES
OF BLUES, ROOTS, REGGAE AND BEYOND





New Album Maestro Includes Guest Appearances By:
Ben Harper, Jack Johnson, Angelique Kidjo, Los Lobos, Ziggy Marley and more

The mythology of American blues is filled with images of the lone musician standing at the crossroads, caught in that gray area between light and shadow, cutting impossible deals with dark forces, offering up nothing less than his soul as collateral.

Composer and multi-instrumentalist Taj Mahal, a two-time GRAMMY® winner and one of the most influential American blues and roots artists of the past half-century, has made no Faustian deals in his long and distinguished career, but he stands at an important crossroads nonetheless. In his never-ending exploration of the complex origins and underpinnings of American music, he has forged a four-decade career by gathering and distilling countless musical traditions from a range of geographical and cultural sources: the Mississippi Delta, the Appalachian backwoods, the African continent, the Hawaiian islands, Europe, the Caribbean and so much more. Taj Mahal doesn’t just stand at the crossroads. He is the crossroads.

On September 30, 2008, he makes his Heads Up International debut with the worldwide release of Maestro (HUCD 3164). This twelve-track set – his first U.S. release in five years – marks the fortieth anniversary of Taj’s rich and varied recording career by mixing original material with chestnuts from vintage sources and newcomers alike. Guests on this anniversary gala include Ben Harper, Jack Johnson, Angelique Kidjo, Los Lobos, Ziggy Marley and others – many of whom have been directly influenced by Taj’s music and guidance.

But Maestro is much more than just a tribute to past glories. It captures the same level of intensity and depth that has characterized every one of Taj’s recordings since his self-titled debut album in 1968. Simply put, four decades have done nothing to dilute his energy quotient. “The one thing I’ve always demanded of the records I’ve made is that they be danceable,” he says. “This record is danceable, it’s listenable, it has lots of different rhythms, it’s accessible, it’s all right in front of you. It’s a lot of fun, and it represents where I am at this particular moment in my life.”

In addition to the standard CD release, Maestro will also be available on vinyl in a Limited Edition 40th Anniversary Collector’s Double LP (HULP 8164).

The set opens with “Scratch My Back,” a song made famous by soul shouter Otis Redding in the 1960s. When Taj and his early band, the Rising Sons, opened for Redding at the Whiskey A-Go-Go in Los Angeles, the up and coming bluesman was immediately hooked by Redding’s fiery stage presence. “There were very few artists who grabbed me the way Otis Redding did,” he says. “If anyone was an example of what I wanted to do with music, he certainly was it. His ability to take someone else’s song and make it his own, and at the same time not lose the essence of the original song, was just fantastic.” “Scratch My Back” is one of four tracks on Maestro to reunite Taj with his Phantom Blues Band, the combo that backed him on two GRAMMY® winning recordings, Señor Blues in 1997 and Shoutin’ in Key in 2000.

The reggae-flavored “Never Let You Go,” co-written by Taj and his daughter, Deva Mahal, features shared vocals by father and daughter against a backdrop by premier Latin rockers Los Lobos. No newcomer to her father’s musical projects, Deva first recorded with Taj as a pre-teen more than 15 years ago, when he made a number of children’s albums on the Music for Little People label. Los Lobos re-appears a few tracks later in the boozy and rollicking “TV Mama,” a tune written by Willie Turner and delivered here in a style reminiscent of seminal electric blues guitarist Elmore James.

Ben Harper joins in on the vocals on “Dust Me Down.” Written by Harper, this jagged and gritty tune is the latest chapter in a longstanding association between these two musicians hailing from separate and distinct generations. Harper’s grandparents, proprietors of the Folk Music Center and Museum in Claremont, California, were fans of Taj who booked him to play numerous gigs at the center many years ago. “Later on, I met their grandson,” says Taj. “I coached him with his guitar playing when he was a teenager. He really had a sensitivity to the music, and over the years we’ve done some performing and recording together.”

Jack Johnson steps in to share vocals on Taj’s well-known “Further On Down the Road.” Taj’s banjo and harmonica juxtaposed against the horn riffs provided by the Phantom Blues band give the song a vibe that’s equal parts down home blues and vintage Stax.

In “Black Man, Brown Man,” Taj takes a trip to the islands with the help of Ziggy Marley and his six-piece band. “It was a tune that came to me back in the ‘70s, when we were in the midst of recording a lot of that Caribbean, African and Latin music,” Taj explains. “I thought it would be a good song for Ziggy and I to do. It not only has a nice reggae vibe, but it addresses a timely topic.” The collaboration on this track represents the third generation of Marleys with whom Taj has now been associated. Reggae icon Bob Marley, along with Jamaican bassist/keyboardist/producer Aston “Family Man” Barrett, helped record and mix Taj’s 1974 album, Mo’ Roots (Family Man also played piano on the Mo’ Roots track, “Slave Driver”). Two decades later, Taj enlisted Bob Marley’s mother, Cedella Marley-Booker – Ziggy’s grandmother – to record an album of African children’s songs on Music for Little People in the early ‘90s.

The exotic African ballad “Zanzibar” was co-written by Taj and Afro-European songstress Angelique Kidjo, who shares the vocals. The track also features Toumani Diabate on kora, a 21-string harp from west Africa. Taj had long been a fan of Toumani’s father, Gambian kora master Sidiki Diabate. “Toumani happened to be here in the United States, and the two of us ended up on a radio program together,” Taj explains. “We played some music on this program, and that just sealed it for both of us. We knew that some kind of musical project would be in our future.” The result was Kulanjan, a 1999 collaborative recording that featured Taj, Toumani and a sextet of west African instrumentalists and vocalists.

Taj pays tribute to New Orleans icon Fats Domino with “Hello Josephine.” He’s aided here by the New Orleans Social Club, the Crescent City quintet whose ranks include Ivan Neville on B3 and George Porter on bass. “I’ve been a Fats Domino fan for years,” says Taj. “He did something with the blues that made it so melodic and bouncy and danceable, in a way that was different from all the other New Orleans cats. And I loved playing with the New Orleans Social Club. They play so well together, and this tune swings really hard.”

The set closes with Taj and the Phantom Blues Band serving up a swaggering, roadhouse rendition of the Willie Dixon/Bo Diddley classic “Diddy Wah Diddy.” In the end, as in the beginning, it’s always about the blues, always about making people move.

“With his record, as with all my records, I want people to roll back the rug and go for it,” says Taj. “This record is just the beginning of another chapter, one that’s going to be open to more music and more ideas. Even at the end of forty years, in many ways my music is just getting started.”



back to top



Taj Mahal - Profile



Composer, multi-instrumentalist and vocalist Taj Mahal is one of the most prominent and influential figures in late 20th century blues and roots music. Though his career began more than four decades ago with American blues, he has broadened his artistic scope over the years to include music representing virtually every corner of the world – west Africa, the Caribbean, Latin America, Europe, the Hawaiian islands and so much more. What ties it all together is his insatiable interest in musical discovery. Over the years, his passion and curiosity have led him around the world, and the resulting global perspective is reflected in his music today.

Born Henry St. Claire Fredericks in Harlem on May 17, 1942, Taj grew up in Springfield, Massachusetts. His father was a jazz pianist, composer and arranger of Caribbean descent, and his mother was a schoolteacher and gospel singer from South Carolina. Both parents encouraged their children to take pride in their diverse ethnic and cultural roots. His father had an extensive record collection and a shortwave radio that brought sounds from near and far into the home. His parents also started him on classical piano lessons, but after only two weeks, young Henry already had other plans about what and how he wanted to play.

In addition to piano, the young musician learned to play the clarinet, trombone and harmonica, and he loved to sing. He discovered his stepfather’s guitar and became serious about it in his teens when a guitarist from North Carolina moved in next door and taught him the various styles of Muddy Waters, Lightnin’ Hopkins, John Lee Hooker and Jimmy Reed and other titans of Delta and Chicago blues.

Springfield in the 1950s was full of recent arrivals, not just from around the U.S. but from all over the globe. “We spoke several dialects in my house – Southern, Caribbean, African – and we heard dialects from eastern and western Europe,” Taj recalls. In addition, musicians from the Caribbean, Africa and all over the U.S. frequently visited the Fredericks home, and Taj became even more fascinated with roots – the origins of the various forms of music he was hearing, the path they took to reach their current form, and how they influenced each other along the way. He threw himself into the study of older forms of African-American music, which the record companies of the day largely ignored.

Henry studied agriculture at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst in the early 1960s. Inspired by a dream, he adopted the musical alias of Taj Mahal and formed the popular U. Mass party band, the Elektras. After graduating, he headed west in 1964 to Los Angeles, where he formed the Rising Sons, a six-piece outfit that included guitarist Ry Cooder. The band opened for numerous high-profile touring artists of the ‘60s, including Otis Redding, the Temptations and Martha and the Vandellas. Around this same time, Taj also mingled with various blues legends, including Howlin’ Wolf, Muddy Waters, Junior Wells, Buddy Guy, Lightnin’ Hopkins and Sleepy John Estes.

This diversity of musical experience served as the bedrock for Taj’s first three recordings: Taj Mahal (1967), The Natch’l Blues (1968) and Giant Step (1969). Drawing on all the sounds and styles he’d absorbed as a child and a young adult, these early albums showed signs of the musical exploration that would be Taj’s hallmark over the years to come.

In the 1970s, Taj carved out a unique musical niche with a string of adventurous recordings, including Happy To be Just Like I Am (1971), Recycling the Blues and Other Related Stuff (1972), the GRAMMY®-nominated soundtrack to the movie Sounder (1973), Mo’ Roots (1974), Music Fuh Ya (Music Para Tu) (1977) and Evolution (The Most Recent) (1978).

Taj’s recorded output slowed somewhat during the 1980s as he toured relentlessly and immersed himself in the music and culture of his new home in Hawaii. Still, that decade saw the well-received release of Taj in 1987, as well as the first three of his celebrated children’s albums on the Music For Little People label.

He returned to a full recording and touring schedule in the 1990s, including such projects as the musical scores for the Langston Hughes/Zora Neale Hurston play Mule Bone (1991) and the movie Zebrahead (1992). Later in the decade, Taj released a series of recordings with the Phantom Blues Band, including Dancing the Blues (1993), Phantom Blues (1996), and the two GRAMMY® winners, Señor Blues (1997) and the live Shoutin’ in Key (2000). Overall, he has been nominated for nine GRAMMY® Awards.

During this same period, Taj continued to expand his multicultural horizons by joining Indian classical musicians on Mumtaz Mahal in 1995, and recording Sacred Island, a blend of Hawaiian music and blues, with the Hula Blues Band in 1998. Kulanjan, released in 1999, was a collaborative project with Malian kora player Toumani Diabate (the kora is a 21-string west African harp). He recorded a second album with the Hula Blues Band, Hanapepe Dream, in 2003. Zanzibar, a European release, followed in 2005.

Taj continues to tour internationally, doing as many as 150 shows per year throughout the U.S., Europe, Australia, New Zealand and beyond.

He joins the Heads Up International label in the fall of 2008 with the worldwide release of Maestro. This twelve-track set – his first U.S. release in five years – marks the fortieth anniversary of Taj’s rich and varied recording career by mixing original material, chestnuts borrowed from vintage sources and newcomers alike. This anniversary gala includes performances by Ben Harper, Jack Johnson, Angelique Kidjo, Los Lobos, Ziggy Marley and others – many of whom have been directly influenced by Taj’s music and guidance.

“The one thing I’ve always demanded of the records I’ve made is that they be danceable,” he says. “This record is danceable, it’s listenable, it has lots of different rhythms, it’s accessible, it’s all right in front of you. It’s a lot of fun, and it represents where I am at this particular moment in my life. This record is just the beginning of another chapter, one that’s going to be open to more music and more ideas. Even at the end of forty years, in many ways my music is just getting started.”


back to top


Contact Us
Heads Up International
23309 Commerce Park Road
Cleveland, OH 44122
USA
Phone: 216.765.7381
Fax: 216.464.6037


Natalie Singer
Product Manager
nsinger@headsup.com

Kajo Paukert
VP of International Sales
kpaukert@headsup.com

Kevin Gschwend
Marketing Coordinator
(Touring Collateral Contact)
kgschwend@headsup.com

Neal Sapper
US Radio Promotion
Phone: 415.453.1558
NewWorldJz@aol.com




Mike Wilpizeski
VP of Publicity
Phone: 718.459.2117
mikew@headsup.com

J. Linder
Marketing Director
jlinder@headsup.com

Kelly Johanns-DiCillo
Tour Publicity
kjohanns@headsup.com

Tim Parnin
New Media Marketing Manager
tparnin@headsup.com

Ordering Online

Vikki Rzepka
Director of Artist & Venue Relations
vrzepka@headsup.com
Artist Websites

www.tajblues.com

www.myspace.com/tajblues
Booking Agency

Monterey International
Paul Goldman & Joshua Knight
312.640.7500
paul@montereyinternational.net
Management

Madison House
Kevin Morris
212.777.0922
kevin@scifidelity.com


Shine On Mangement
Valerie Celene
831.295.2049
valerie@shineonmanagement.com


back to top



International Partners  
USA
Fontana Distribution
Tel: 877.878.3668
Web: http://www.fontanadistribution.com/

Australia
Fuse Music Group
23 David St. Brunswick
Melbourne, Victoria 3056
Tel: 03 9388 0444
Fax: 03 9388 0400
Email: info@fusemusic.com.au
Web: www.fusemusic.com.au/

Austria
Edel Musica Vertriebs GmbH
Lustenauerstrasse 27
Dornbirn
Tel: 0043 5572 23494
Fax: 0043 5572 23498
Email: Info_Austria@edel.com

Belgium
Codaex
Larenstraat 58
Lummen 3560
Tel: 013 352060
Fax: 013 556750
Email: be@codaex.com
Web: www.codaex.com

Brazil
Calber Music
Rua Senastiao Rodrigues Camargo Filho, 98
Itatiba
Sao Paulo 13257-551
Tel: 011 4538 5611
Fax: 011 4538 5611
Email: info@calbermusic.com.br
Web: www.calbermusic.com.br

Canada
Universal Music Canada
2450 Victoria Park Ave.
Willowdale
Ontario
Tel: (416) 718-4000
Fax: (416) 718-4222
Email:canada.webmaster@unistudios.com

China
Universal Music Ltd. (China Division)
Level 28, Millennium City 6
392 Kwun Tong Road
Kwun Tong
Kowloon, Hong Kong
Tel: (852) 2301 5888
Fax: (852) 2312 7328
Web: www.umg.com.hk

Croatia
Menart
Bencekoviceva 19
10 000 Zagreb
Tel: +385 01 6594912
Fax: + 385 01 6594 910
Email: info@menart.hr
Web: www.menart.hr

Czech Republic
Classic Music Distribution
Biskupcova 26 / 1910
Prague 130 00
Tel: 022 583 275
Fax: 022 773 405
Email: classic@telecom.cz

Denmark
Mis. Label
Jellingvej 6
Svenstrup 8543
Tel: 098 38 04 04
Fax: 098 38 29 28
Email: lars@mislabel.dk
Web: www.mislabel.dk

Finland
Oy Fg-Naxos Ab (Ltd.)
07000 Helsinki
Tel: 029 123800
Email: info@fg-naxos.fi
Web: www.fg-naxos.fi

France
Socadisc
Rue Pasteur
91790 Boissy Sous St. Yon
Tel: 01 64 91 90 90
Fax: 01 64 91 90 99
Email: contact@socadisc.com
Web: www.socadisc.com

Germany
In-Akustik GmbH & Co.
Untermatten, 12-14
79282 Ballrechten-Dottingen
Tel: 07634 56100
Fax: 07634 5610 80
Email: mailto@in-akustik.com
Web: www.in-akustik.com

Greece
Greek Record Club
57 Akadimias Street
10679 Athens
Tel: 0210 363 8877
Fax: 0210 363 2277
Email: grc@otenet.gr

Hong Kong
Universal Music Ltd.
Level 28, Millennium City 6
392 Kwun Tong Road
Kwun Tong
Kowloon, Hong Kong
Tel: 852 2301 5888
Fax: 852 2312 7328
Web: www.umg.com.hk

Hungary
Karsay Es Tarsa KFT
Koszta Jozsef Utca 26
1124 Budapest
Tel: 01 200 6443
Fax: 01 200 9650
Email: gyukars@t-online.hu

Iceland
12 Tonar
Skolavordustig 15,
Reykjavik
Tel: 01 511 5656
Fax: 01 511 5657
Email: 12tonar@12tonar.is

India
Jelly Bean Inc.
#48 Cubbon Road
Bangalore
Tel: 080 509 6741
Fax: 080 553 5668
Email: prithvijellybeaninc@yahoo.com

Indonesia
Pt. Suara Sentral Sejati
Jl. Pluit Permai 7
No. 8 Jakartia-Utaza
Tel: 021-662-6935
Fax: 021-662-6931

Ireland
Proper Note Ltd.
The New Powerhouse
Gateway Business Centre
Kangley Bridge Road
London SE26 5AN
Tel: 020 8676 5114
Fax: 020 8676 5190
Email: pn.info@propernote.co.uk
Web: www.propernote.co.uk

Israel
NMC United Entertainment Ltd. Cinema City Complex
Zomet Glilot
P.O. Box 9036
Ramat Hasharon 47100
Israel
Tel: 03-6909800
Fax: 03-6909801
Email: info@nmc-music.co.il
Web: www.nmc-music.co.il

Italy
Jazz/Blues
M.T. SRL
Corso Mazzini, 12
12037 Saluzzo
Italy
Tel: 0175 217323
Fax: 0175 475154
Email: info@egeamusic.com
Web: www.egeamusic.com

Classical
Sound and Music SRL
Via Mazzarosa, 105
55100 Lucca
Tel: 05 83581327
Fax: 05 83587330
Email: info@soundandmusic.com
Web: http://www.soundandmusic.com

Japan
Universal Music LLC
8-5-30 Akasaka
Minato-Ku
107-8583 Tokyo
Tel: 03-6406-3547
Fax: 03-6406-3135
Web: http://www.universal-music.co.jp/

Jordan
Music Master
P.O. Box 6675
Jeddah
Tel: 02 660 70 20
Fax: 02 665 75 15
Email: gpd@gpd.com.sa
Web: http://www.music-master.com/

Korea
Media Synnara Co., Ltd.
4th flr. Synnara Distribution Center
Dongcheon-Dong 856
Yongin-Si
Tel: 031-276-2931 (or 2932)
Fax: 031-276-2933

Latvia
Multimediju Aksesuari Ltd.
Veca Jurmalas Gatve 7 -1
Riga 1083
Tel: 067 566 677
Fax: 067 566 640
Email: office.ma@apollo.lv

Lebanon

Music Master
P.O. Box 6675
Jeddah
Tel: 02 660 70 20
Fax: 02 665 75 15
Email: gpd@gpd.com.sa
Web: http://www.music-master.com/

Luxembourg

Codaex
Prinsengracht 17
1015 DK Amsterdam
The Netherlands
Tel: 020 6129724
Fax: 020 6894405
Email: nl@codaex.com
Web: www.codaex.com

Malaysia
Universal Music Sdn. Bhd.
G.01 Ground Floor
Wisma Academy, 4A
Jalan 19 / 1
Petaling Jaya
46300 Kuala Lumpur
Tel: 03 758 7433
Fax: 03 754 6198
Web: www.getmusic.com.my

Mexico
Judy S.A.
87 Blvd. Puerto Aereo
Col. Federal
15700 Mexico City, C.P
Tel: 055 5571-1387
Fax: 055 5786-0216
Email: info@djudy.com
Web: www.djudy.com

Netherlands
Codaex Nederland
Prinsengracht 17
1015 DK Amsterdam
Tel: 020 6129724
Fax: 020 6894405
Email: nl@codaex.com
Web: www.codaex.com

New Zealand

Ode Records
2 King Edwards Avenue
Auckland 1446
Tel: 09 630 1177
Fax: 09 630 1175
Email: info@oderecords.co.nz
Web: www.oderecords.co.nz

Norway
Mudi A/S
c/o Diskps
Ryensvingen 3
0680 Oslo
Tel: 066 96 5530
Fax: 066 91 0202
Email: post@mudi.no

Peru
Palco SA
Av. Jorge Chavez 294
Miraflores
Lima 18
Tel: 014 447 1978
Fax: 014 444 1442
Email: palcosa@pol.com.pe

Philippines
MCA Universal
34th Floor Raffles Corporate Center Emerald Avenue, Ortigas Center
Pasig City 1600
Tel: 02 916 2504
Fax: 02 916 2551
Email: mca_univ@compass.com.ph

Poland
Dream Music Sp. Z.o.o.
Wspolna 52/54 Apt. 18
00-687 Warsaw
Tel: 022 6290403
Fax: 022 6290403
Email: info@dreammusic.pl
Web: www.dreammusic.pl

Portugal
Andante-Discos Musica E. Som, LDA Av. Boavista 1471-L 9
Porto 4100-131
Tel: 022 606 3518
Fax: 022 606 3416
Email: music@andante.pt
Web: www.andantemusic.blogspot.com

Puerto Rico
Disco Hit
P.O. Box 13895
623 Cerra, P.D.A. 15
Santurce, Puerto Rico 00908
Tel: 787-723-4942
Fax: 787-724-2561
Email: discohit@prtc.net

Republic of Trinidad
Sanch Electronix, LTD.
16 Riverside Road
Curepe
Tel: (868) 663 1384
Fax: (868) 645 2205
Email: sanch@carib-link.net

Russia
Purple Legion
RSK Universal Trading
1 Novokuznetskaya Street
Moscow
Tel: 095 953 6036
Fax: 095 953 4652
Email: nschelok@san.rr.com
Web: www.plegion.ru

Saudi Arabia
Music Master
P.O. Box 6675
Jeddah
Tel: 02 660 70 20
Fax: 02 665 75 15
Email: gpd@gpd.com.sa
Web: http://www.music-master.com/

Singapore
Universal Music Pte. Ltd.
118 Lorong 23 Geylang
#03-01 02
SCN Industrial Building
388402 Singapore
Tel: (65) 741-2220
Fax: (65) 741-0500 / 741-1266

Slovakia
DIVYD
Trstinska 11
84106 Bratislava
Tel: 02 5443 3888
Fax: 02 5443 4387
Email: divyd@divyd.sk
Web: www.divyd.sk/

Slovenia, Serbia, Montenegro, Bosna+Hercegovina
INTEK D.o.o.
Koroska Cesta 14
4000 Kranj
Tel: 04 2363 430
Fax: 04 2363 434
Email: intek@siol.net
Web: www.intek.si

South Africa
Sheer Sound CC
356 Oak Avenue, Ferndale
2194 Randburg
Tel: 011 438 7000
Fax: 011 789 6425
Email: info@sheer.co.za
Web: www.sheer.co.za

South Korea
Media Synnara Co., Ltd.
4th Floor, 856 Dongcheon-Dong Yongin-Si
Gyeonggi-Do 449-120
Tel: 031-276-2931
Fax: 031-276-2933
Email: sdc@synnara.com
Web: www.synnara.com

Spain
Indigo Records
C/Eugenia de Montijo No. 59
Portal 5 – 4A
28025 Madrid
Spain 28025
Tel: 091-466-7016
Fax: 091-525-0001
Email: indigo@enfasisrecords.com
Web: www.indigorecords.net

Sweden
Naxos Sweden AB
Kryptongatan 6
703 74 Örebro
Tel: 019 206853
Fax: 019 206865
Email: info@naxos.se
Web: www.naxosdirect.se

Switzerland
Musikvertrieb AG
Badenerstrasse 55
Zurich 8048
Switzerland
Tel: 01 497 1700
Fax: 01 497 1727
Email: info@musikvertrieb.ch
Web: http://www.musikvertrieb.ch

Taiwan
Sunrise International Enterprise Corp.
77-4 Chungshan North Road
Section 2
Taipei
Tel: 02 2511 8595
Fax: 02 2581 5849
Email: info@sunrise-records.com.tw
Web: www.sunrise-records.com.tw

Thailand
Universal Music Thailand
1126/2 Vanit II Building 17/F
New Petchburi Road
Bangkok 10400
Tel: 02 655 2222
Fax: 02 250 1510

Trinidad
Sanch Electronix Limited
23 King Street
St. Joseph, Trinidad
Tel: 868-663-1384
Fax: 868-645-2205
Email: sanch@carib-link.net
Web: http://www.sanch.com/

Turkey
Equinox Music & Entertainment
Ortabahce Caddesi
Sair Leyla Sok., Mizan Apt. 13/1
Besiktas
34353 Istanbul
Tel: 0212 327 2445
Tel: 0212 327 4898
Email: ekinoks@equinox-music.com
Web: www.equinox-music.com

Ukraine
Trade Music Express
Prospect 50 Let Octyabrya
Kiev
Email: vipwtc@gmail.com

United Arab Emirates
Music Master
P.O. Box 23076
Dubai
Tel: 04 2952221
Fax: 04 2954441
Email: music@music-master.com
Web: http://www.music-master.com/

United Kingdom
Proper Note Ltd.
The New Powerhouse
Gateway Business Centre
Kangley Bridge Road
London SE26 5AN
Tel: 020 8676 5114
Fax: 020 8676 5190
Email: pn.info@propernote.co.uk
Web: www.propernote.co.uk


back to top