Why Chris Daughtry started his own record label

Why Chris Daughtry Started His Own Record Label

In the summer of 2019, Daughtry walked away from RCA Records and bet on themselves.

It was a bold move.

After all, why would any successful rock band willingly step away from the machinery of a major label and take on the burden of doing more of the work themselves?

As Chris Daughtry later explained, the answer was simple: they wanted their music back.

Chris Daughtry Dogtree Records

A Deal That Came With Strings Attached

Chris Daughtry’s issues with RCA dated back far earlier than many fans realised.

The deal he originally signed in the aftermath of American Idol handed over significant control, and even after renegotiating things in 2007 so Daughtry could properly function as a band rather than a solo vehicle, the power imbalance never truly disappeared.

A revolving door of A&R “suits” were assigned to the project, creating a cycle of interference which left the band feeling less like artists and more like passengers.

That loss of control, he says, began on the very first album.

Daughtry claims that every one of the band’s five RCA releases contained at least one song he never fully believed in — tracks pushed on them by the label until resistance began to feel pointless. And in his view, the clearest early example was Feels Like Tonight.

The irony is that the song became one of the band’s best-known singles, even though Daughtry says he never connected with it in the first place.

The track would later become entangled in legal controversy, with Randy Mazick of The Asphalt filing suit in 2008 and alleging that its chorus had been lifted from his song Tonight.

It’s hard to disagree with Mazick when the songs are placed side by side, and the case landed RCA’s team of outside writers (Max Martin, Shep Solomon, and Dr. Luke) in serious hot water.

The whole affair only deepened Daughtry’s distrust of the label.

Daughtry record label

The Slow Erosion of Control

The follow-up, Leave This Town (2009), was respectable by almost any normal standard.

But for a band trying to match the freakishly high commercial benchmark of the debut, it felt like a step back — and Chris Daughtry took that hard.

The timing was cruel. Streaming was beginning to reshape the industry, album sales were falling across the board, and Daughtry found himself internalising broader market change as personal failure.

That made him vulnerable.

This was the point where the band tried to dig in and resist label pressure to chase a more pop-orientated sound, writing much of third album Break The Spell on the back of the tour bus as opposed to in the studio.

Chris Daughtry still speaks of it with real affection.

But the fallout was immediate.

When the label then failed to properly promote Break The Spell, the album underperformed, and in the band’s eyes that effectively handed RCA even more leverage over the direction of the next record.

The next record was Baptized — and it proved catastrophic.

Daughtry have never made any secret of how deeply unhappy they were with the process. Worn down, low on confidence, and desperate not to lose the career they had worked so hard to build, Chris Daughtry says he effectively surrendered control and allowed the label to steer the band toward the glossy pop direction it wanted.

However, tensions were now beginning to show.

The album’s underwhelming commercial performance was a double-edged sword for Daughtry.

On the one hand, it proved to the band that the head honchos were dead wrong. But on the other, they were now at serious jeopardy of losing the fanbase they’d spent years building.

For a band who felt they had already been pushed away from the music they actually wanted to make, the disappointing response to Baptized confirmed their worst fear: they had compromised themselves for an outcome they never even got.

Why did Chris Daughtry leave RCA Records

Breaking Point

By the time Cage To Rattle rolled around in 2018, trust had all but evaporated.

The hostile reception to Baptized had caused Daughtry to step away from the scene for five long years, and he says RCA lured him back to the studio by pitching that the next project would be a return to heavier rock — only for personnel changes to once again alter the direction mid-process.

The familiar cycle repeated itself: one set of promises, another round of intereference, and a growing sense that the band’s songs were being edited into shapes they no longer recognised.

What followed was more of them same…

That was the breaking point.

When RCA’s deal finally expired in 2019, Daughtry were offered the chance to sign elsewhere — but this time they chose a different route. Rather than risk repeating the same relationship under a new logo, they decided to take control for themselves.

Dogtree Records was born.

Walking away from a major label meant sacrificing the comfort of up-front money and industry infrastructure, but in return they gained the thing they valued most: creative freedom.

Why did Chris Daughtry start his own record label

The Sound of Freedom

The first album released under Dogtree Records was Dearly Beloved (2021), and the difference was immediate.

Freed from external interference, Daughtry finally sounded like a band enjoying themselves again. The record was heavier, sharper, and more direct — the kind of hard rock statement they had been trying to make for years without compromise.

Chris Daughtry has called it the album he is most proud of in his entire career.

Dearly Beloved suggests that Daughtry have finally reached their true form.

Tracks like Lioness and Dearly Beloved weren’t new ideas born from the freedom of Dogtree so much as examples of ideas that had previously been held back, reshaped, or rejected under the old system.

This time, they were allowed to exist in the manner their writer intended.

So was there an element of wanting to stick it to the man?

Chris Daughtry doesn’t exactly deny it.

But the quest for revenge is outweighed by the feeling of relief — and rediscovery. The move away from RCA didn’t just give Daughtry control of their output. It reconnected the frontman with the very reasons he fell in love with music in the first place.

Daughtry’s quest for self-discovery is beautifully narrated in one of the new songs.

That, more than anything else, is why Chris Daughtry started his own record label.

Not to play executive.

Not to make a grand statement.

Not even to prove RCA wrong.

He did it so Daughtry could sound like Daughtry again.

>> The Story of Chris Daughtry’s Dogtree Records is part of our Daughtry series.

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3 responses to “Why Chris Daughtry Started His Own Record Label”

  1. […] stepping away from the major-label system, he’s spoken more openly about label pressure — the sense that RCA wanted Daughtry to chase a […]

  2. […] In the years after Cage To Rattle, frontman Chris Daughtry has been noticeably more candid about what went on behind the scenes. […]

  3. […] importantly, it’s their first studio album outside RCA, and you can hear the relief in the writing: less “format”, more […]

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