The label was dedicated to underground, conscious hip-hop and was started by
Bigg Jus, one of the founders of the underground NYC group
Company Flow of
Rawkus Records, Peter Lupoff, an entertainment investor, and
Fiona Bloom, hip-hop publicist and then label manager of the hip-hop label 3-2-1 Records. Sub Verse was launched in 1998 and released artists such as
Blackalicious, Rubberroom, Scienz of Life,
KMD,
MF Doom, Micranots,
C-Rayz Walz and
Bigg Jus. Their records were distributed worldwide through
EMI and received critical acclaim.Though Sub Verse came very close to getting bought or invested in by
MCA, with the industry in decline the label eventually ran out of money and could not put out records that would at least make the cost back. The events of 9/11 also took their toll on the morale and the financial fortunes of the NY company.[http://www.grooveon.com.au/content.cfm?article=3169 These factors occurred just as Sub Verse's music started to become more broadly accessible, with releases by
MF Doom, the important release of
KMD's
Black Bastards, and LPs and singles by some up and coming artists such as
C-Rayz Walz, BukueOne, Tariq L and DMS. Sub Verse put out its last release, a compilation called "Seditious Jewels", in 2003. Sub Verse Music supported the underground hip-hop scene in NYC and to a degree, the larger cities in the US with shows in New York, regularly at
The Knitting Factory for instance. The label had a separate entity, called "Subversive Skool", run by Fiona Bloom with Peter Lupoff, that brought underground artists from outside NYC to New York. Shows were headlined by the "star", usually had another NYC local notable and one or two Sub Verse artists or prospects. It was sponsored by 555 Soul and
Eckō Unltd., among others. The label also gave CDs, vinyl, T-shirts, other Sub Verse gear and their time and effort to support causes like hip-hop education (at the
Brooklyn Museum), the Hip-Hop Film Festival, and Tolerance.org. ==People==