Gerard Cosloy
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Gerard Cosloy (born 1964) is an American music industry executive.
[edit] Biography
Cosloy was raised in a northern suburb of Boston. While he was still in high school, he started Conflict, a mimeographed fanzine of underground and alternative rock and art. He continued to write and edit the fanzine during the '80's and early '90's.
It was via Conflict that Cosloy first heard the band Pavement, after Scott Kannberg sent the fanzine the band's first studio recording, Slay Tracks. He did some DJing at WZBC, Boston College's radio station, as well. He had a record label called Conflict Records, which issued two compilations called Bands that Could be God I and II. He also put out a few singles.[citation needed] Gerard also promoted shows in the Boston area, one of them being hardcore band Deep Wound which evolved into Dinosaur Jr.
He ran Homestead Records in the 1980s; DJ'd at WFMU; played in the group Air Traffic Controllers, and later became part owner of Matador Records, the New York independent label founded by Chris Lombardi.
In 1984 he was approached by the management of Dutch East India Trading Co., a Long Island based record distributor, to manage an independent record label previously started by Sam Berger called Homestead. He moved to New York for the position. Homestead put out many of the mid-80s defining alt-rock records, from Big Black, Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr., My Dad Is Dead and many others. He continued to publish Conflict during this time.
Matador Records became Cosloy's next label to work with. Matador Records was started in 1989 by Dutch East employee Chris Lombardi and Cosloy joined into the partnership in 1990.
For a time Cosloy lived in London working with Matador's UK and US operations. As of Autumn 2004, he has been living in Austin, Texas, continuing his partnership with Lombardi.
He has also started the experimental record label Parallelism and the label 12XU.
Cosloy is also a musician and is a member of Air Traffic Controllers as well as working with punk singer GG Allin for a short period. From 1992-1996, he fronted the New York quartet Envelope, while briefly filling in as bassist for the Dustdevils during Mark Ibold's tenure in Pavement.
Cosloy has a daily blog called Can't Stop the Bleeding. [1]