Miles Copeland III, the son of CIA officer
Miles Copeland Jr., played many roles in the U.K.
punk rock and
new wave music industry of the middle to late 1970s: agent, manager, producer, magazine publisher, record company and label owner. His brother
Ian was the head of a talent agency, Frontier Booking International (F.B.I.), while his brother
Stewart played drums for
The Police, a band that Copeland managed. The Police's first album was released on
A&M Records in 1978 with a hit single, "
Roxanne", that Copeland called a turning point in his life. Building on success with the Police, Copeland convinced
Jerry Moss, co-owner of A&M, to establish the I.R.S. division in 1979. I.R.S. stood for International Record Syndicate. From 1983 to 1987, I.R.S. Records sponsored a monthly
MTV show called
I.R.S. Records Presents The Cutting Edge, hosted by
Peter Zaremba of
The Fleshtones. The series concentrated on bands that recorded for the label. The show concept would later evolve into the alternative rock program
120 Minutes, which was launched in 1986 and co-existed with
Cutting Edge for about a year and a half. I.R.S. releases were distributed by A&M until 1985, then by
MCA Records until 1990, and by
EMI until the label folded in 1996. In 1985, Copeland brokered a deal to switch the label's distributor to MCA Records. Under the agreement, A&M continued to release the label's pre-1985 catalog, much of which still can be found under the A&M banner. Copeland sold the I.R.S. music publishing to
Rondor Music in 1995. The label folded in May 1996, with its last release being
All Set by
Buzzcocks, issued two weeks before the closure. Shortly after, Copeland formed
Ark 21 Records. In 2011, EMI revived the label; as of 2012, the new label had
Chiddy Bang and
Foxy Shazam on its roster. In October 2013, shortly after the integration of EMI into its successor,
Universal Music Group, the label was revived again as I.R.S. Nashville, with
Striking Matches,
Marc Scibilia and
Cowboy Jack Clement on its roster before being shut down once again in 2015. ==Faulty Products labels==