Marvel Music

Marvel Music
Parent companyMarvel Comics
StatusDiscontinued
PredecessorMarvel Music Groups[1][2]
(1981–1989)
Founded1994 (1994)
Defunct1995 Edit this on Wikidata
SuccessorMarvel Music (record label) (through Hollywood Records)
Country of originUnited States
Headquarters locationNew York City
Key people
  • Mort Todd (Editor)
  • Karl Bollers
  • (assistant editor)[3]
Publication typesComics
Fiction genresMusic

Marvel Music was a short-lived imprint of Marvel Comics, introduced in 1994 to publish comics developed in collaboration with musicians.

The concept descended from previous Marvel collaborations with Kiss (which starred in a Marvel Comics Super Special featuring the band portrayed as superheroes fighting Marvel villains), and Alice Cooper. In an effort to diversify beyond superhero works, Marvel introduced the Marvel Music imprint in 1994, with Mort Todd as its editor. The imprint featured comics influenced by the life stories and music of various musicians and bands, having published works in collaboration with Alice Cooper, Billy Ray Cyrus, the estate of Bob Marley, Marty Stuart, Onyx, and the Rolling Stones.

The Marvel Music series was considered unsuccessful; Todd felt that Marvel did not market the series well, while only Marty Stuart took up Marvel's suggestion to sell the comics as concert merchandise. Marvel's president Terry Stewart felt that the imprint may have been "doomed at the beginning", and it was discontinued in 1995 in the wake of Marvel's descent into bankruptcy.

  1. ^ "New World Entertainment Inc. Completes Sale of Marvel for $82.5 Million; Company Begins 1989 With Busy Schedule and Further Debt Reduction". PR Newswire. January 25, 1989. Retrieved October 4, 2011.[dead link]
  2. ^ "NWCG [New World Communications Group] Holdings Corp. Form 10-K405". SEC Info, Fran Finnegan & Company. Archived from the original on May 16, 2012. Retrieved November 5, 2011.
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference spin was invoked but never defined (see the help page).