ST Holdings ceasing trading from

As I'm sure a lot of you have read our distributor, ST Holdings will be closing their doors at the end of the month.

They've been vital in getting Critical Music where it is today and for that we will always be grateful.

I want to assure our fans that our commitment to vinyl will continue and that we have in place everything we need to to keep doing what we do best.

Release date for our next label EP to come very soon and there will also be a brand new Critical Store , with a fresh range of merchandise and exclusives.

Thanks to everyone for your continued support

Keep it Critical

xox

from kasra's fackbook
 
As I'm sure a lot of you have read our distributor, ST Holdings will be closing their doors at the end of the month.

They've been vital in getting Critical Music where it is today and for that we will always be grateful.

I want to assure our fans that our commitment to vinyl will continue and that we have in place everything we need to to keep doing what we do best.

Release date for our next label EP to come very soon and there will also be a brand new Critical Store , with a fresh range of merchandise and exclusives.

Thanks to everyone for your continued support

Keep it Critical

xox

from criticals basefook.
 
LTJ Just put this on his facebook -
NEWS RA - "Starting today, we are only going to work with a small number of approximately 30 record labels that reflect this ethos. Regrettably this means that some labels are being let go, to whom I am sorry."

It just shows how far out of touch he is with other distributors and other labels that he didnt even know about anything changing until today....and then uploaded an old news story.
 
looks like STHoldings has to some degree reformed under the name Unearthed:

http://www.unearthedsounds.co.uk/bl...ngs-is-closing-end-of-an-era-start-of-another
http://www.unearthedsounds.co.uk/pages/vinyl_record_distribution

also, someone from dubstep forum mentioned the following:

"What actually happened is pretty simple the business was owned by two brothers Andrew and Chris Parkinson, Chris left some time ago and was really the man behind the music side and Andrew was the money man. The staff that were there had worked there for a while and could hold it down but recently a few staff members left and replacements could not be found, its that simple they were making money and ran a tight ship but without the staff you simply can not run a business. The idea was to scale it down but when ST dropped so many labels some of the ones they kept on left and the decision was made to close."
 
Last edited:
"What actually happened is pretty simple the business was owned by two brothers Andrew and Chris Parkinson, Chris left some time ago and was really the man behind the music side and Andrew was the money man. The staff that were there had worked there for a while and could hold it down but recently a few staff members left and replacements could not be found, its that simple they were making money and ran a tight ship but without the staff you simply can not run a business. The idea was to scale it down but when ST dropped so many labels some of the ones they kept on left and the decision was made to close."

Now that makes a lot more sense. A company is only as good as it's employees!
 
From CMU:

Distributor STHoldings to close
Electronic music distribution company STHoldings will cease trading at the end of this month, according to FACT. Launched in 1998, the company initially set itself up as a drum n bass distributor, and subsequently grew to work with labels releasing a variety of underground electronic genres in the UK.

In May, reports Clash, the company pared back its operations, reducing its client base from almost 200 to around 30 labels, owner Andrew Parkinson saying at the time: "We set out to build something that empowered the underground independent artist and gave them freedom to focus on their art. Things have changed... the ethos is getting lost and STH and its labels are dissatisfied".

He went on: "Personally I do not feel that STHoldings can and should continue on its current path. I have decided to hit the reset button and for STH to return to its roots ... Starting today, we are only going to work with a small number of approximately 30 record labels that reflect this ethos".

However, just two months later the company is now seemingly shutting up shop completely, with payments to labels due to be brought up to date by September. Meanwhile former Sales Manager Mat Harwood has already launched a new vinyl distribution service, as part of Bournemouth record shop Unearthed Sounds, which also opened this month.

Since news of the closure broke, there has apparently been some confusion amongst labels still signed to the company over the ownership of metalwork from which their vinyl is pressed. According to a post on the blog of vinyl broker Well Tempered, an email from STHoldings told labels that they own the metalwork and should contact pressing plants direct to claim it./

However, writes Well Tempered: "This is not entirely accurate. The metalwork is not owned by the label. The rights to the metalwork is owned by the pressing plant that manufactured them. The rights to the masters embedded into the metalwork is owned by the record label".

The post continues: "Please don't panic and feel the need to have to 'claim' ownership of the metalwork - it will not be going anywhere. The pressing plant will not destroy it. I have agreements in place whereby I can take control of STHoldings-related metalwork when needed. This is by no means a complicated procedure".

STHoldings, you may remember, made headlines back in 2011 when the digital distribution side of the company pulled its entire catalogue off Spotify, saying at the time: "As a distributor we have to do what is best for our labels. The majority of which do not want their music on such services because of the poor revenues and the detrimental affect on sales. Add to that, the feeling that their music loses its specialness by its exploitation as a low value/free commodity. Quoting one of our labels: 'Let's keep the music special, fuck Spotify'".

No official statement on the closure has yet been made publicly by the distribution firm.
 
Back
Top Bottom