The artists included Mac Davis, Jeanne Pruett, Andres Segovia, Freddie Hart, The Four Freshmen, Patti Page, The Oak Ridge Boys, Stonewall Jackson, Mel Street, Charlie Louvin, Barbara Fairchild, Billy Walker, Rayburn Anthony, Sarah Vaughan, Lena Horne, Justin Tubb, Dowops, John Lee Hooker, Ferlin Husky, Ray Pillow [2] and Big Ben Atkins.
[4] According to the November 27, 1982 issue of Cash Box, Mike Figlio a man with a twenty-five-year history in the music industry which included past involvement with CBS Records, Music City Workshop and Koala Records had come on board as an Indigo staff member.
[7] It was announced in March that Rebecca Norman who previously was with PolyGram Records in Dallas had joined Indigo Music Corp as a promotion assistant.
[8] The April 2, 1983 issue of Cash Box announced that Indigo Music Corp had acquired Accord/Townhouse Records.
Lawrence C. Broderick had been in Toronto and moved to Nashville in 1976, where he bought Nuggett Studios, and had established his own production company.
[12] On April 1, 1984, the company launched the Prime of Life Network as their entry into the market of national television.
It was aimed at people over the age of 45 and the subject matter would be health, travel and in entertainment, the music would be from the big band era and classic movies.