Mann had been signed to Geffen, which was drastically downsized
during the Universal's $10.4 billion merger with Polygram. And with
over two hundred acts expected to be dropped in coming months from
labels such as Geffen, A&M, Mercury and others, Mann, a
critically acclaimed singer/songwriter who does not typically top
the sales charts, was just one of many anxious artists wondering if
they'd make the cut.
But according to the singer's manager Michael Hausman, Mann has been told her next record, tentatively titled Bachelor Number Two, will be released by Universal's Interscope Records, sometime this spring. "It was a little frustrating because they didn't come right out and say, 'You guys are in,'" says Hausman. "Finally they said, 'Don't you get it? We only told people who are dropped, not people who are staying with us.'"
Mann, the former lead singer of the Eighties group `Til
Tuesday, is particularly relieved since she's in the final
stages of completing her new record. If she had been dropped, Mann
might have had to buy back the record from her label, which can
cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. Plus, Mann has already gone
through one label trauma in her career. Her 1995 album, I'm
With Stupid, was recorded for Imago Records, but the company
folded before the record could be released. After much legal
wrangling Geffen finally issued the album.
Helping Mann's case at Universal was the fact that her A&R rep
at Geffen, Jim Barber, was also picked up at
Interscope, which meant Mann had an additional ally inside the
company. Also, Mann is working on the soundtrack to an upcoming
movie from box office champ Tom Cruise, which no doubt interested
Interscope. The film, Magnolia, is being directed by Paul
Thomas Anderson, who won acclaim for 1997's Boogie Nights.
According to Hausman, the plan now is for approximately eight new
Mann songs to be featured in the drama/comedy, set in the Valley
outside Los Angeles. The movie will be released either late this
year or early in 2000.
For Mann, who's also scheduled to hit the road with summer with
Lilith Fair, 1999, which had the potential to be a tumultuous year,
is suddenly shaping up as one to remember. Says Hausman, "Things
are looking good."
ERIC BOEHLERT(March 5, 1999)
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.