Boy's Own (record label)

Boy's Own
Founded1986
Founder
GenreElectronic
Country of originUnited Kingdom
LocationLondon, England
Official websitewww.boysownproductions.com

Boy's Own is an English fanzine, promoter, and record label specialising in electronic dance music.[1] Underworld, The Chemical Brothers and X-Press 2 are its most successful artists.

History

The origins of Boy's Own go back to 1986, when a group of young clubbers started a fanzine of the same name,[2] inspired by a similar fanzine for Liverpool football fans called The End, edited by future singer of The Farm, Peter Hooton; the title Boys Own had been used by several boys' adventure magazines from about 1850 to 1950. The Boy's Own crew, consisting of Terry Farley, Andrew Weatherall, Cymon Eckel and Steven Mayes, knew fellow Chelsea fan Paul Oakenfold and through their connections with him they were invited to the early acid house club nights that Oakenfold was holding in London.[2][3][4]

As the crew began to become more involved in clubbing, the fanzine began to cover the nascent scene, becoming its key chronicler and influencing a wave of similar fanzines across the country.[5] In 1988, they began hosting their own events,[6] and in 1990 they formed Boy's Own Recordings (1990โ€“1993) with London Records/FFRR releasing music by Bocca Juniors, One Dove, Jah Wobble, D.S.K, Denim and Less Stress.[7][8]

In 1992, Farley and Steven Hall formed the offshoot Junior Boy's Own/Junior Recordings. The label was run by Hall, with A&R shared by them both. Farley focused on house singles, with releases by him and Pete Heller as Bocca Juniors, Fire Island, and Roach Motel, as well as from X-Press 2, Ballistic Brothers, and others. Hall signed album-orientated live acts including The Chemical Brothers, Black Science Orchestra and Underworld. During the late 1990s, the label split in two, with 12" vinyl dance tracks being released by Junior London and album projects through Hall's new joint venture label JBO, which partnered with Richard Branson's V2 and then Parlophone/EMI. The label wound down in the mid-2000s.[9]

Selected discography

Albums

Compilations

  • Junior Boy's Own, Various Artists, 1994.

References

  1. ^ "Junior Boy's Own Looks Toward Second Year of V2 Deal". Billboard. October 1998. p. 37. Retrieved 23 October 2018.
  2. ^ a b Colin Larkin, ed. (1998). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Dance Music (First ed.). Virgin Books. p. 177. ISBN 0-7535-0252-6.
  3. ^ Clive Martin (25 March 2014). "The Story of Boy's Own: The Acid House Gang Who Changed British Clubbing". Vice Mag.
  4. ^ "Boys will be Boys โ€” the story of Boy's Own". Oi Polloi. 4 January 2019.
  5. ^ Collin, Matthew (1998). "Summer of Love". Altered State: The Story of Ecstasy Culture and Acid House (2nd updated ed.). Serpent's Tail. pp. 56โ€“57. ISBN 1-85242-604-7.
  6. ^ Brewster, Bill; Broughton, Frank (2006). Last Night a DJ Saved My Life: The History of the Disc Jockey (2nd updated ed.). Headline Book Publishing. p. 500. ISBN 0-7553-1398-4.
  7. ^ Bainbridge, Luke (2014). The True Story of Acid House: Britain's Last Youth Culture Revolution. Omnibus Press.
  8. ^ Shulman, Alon (2019). The Second Summer of Love: How Dance Music Took Over the World. John Blake.
  9. ^ Wray, Daniel Dylan (14 February 2025). "'It was wonderfully innocent': Boy's Own, the fanzine that defined the acid house generation". The Guardian.