Electrola

Electrola is a German record label and subsidiary of Universal Music Group. Based in Munich, its roster has included Chumbawamba, Matthias Reim, Helene Fischer, Brings, Höhner and Santiano.

Electrola
Parent company
FoundedMay 8, 1925 (1925-05-08)
FounderGramophone Company (Carl Lindström A.G.)
GenreVarious
Country of originGermany
LocationCologne
Official websiteUniversal-music.de

History

On 8 May 1925 the British Gramophone Company founded Electrola GmbH in Nowawes near Berlin and received its record licence in December. In March 1931, through its parent company's merger with Lindström's parent Columbia Gramophone Company to form EMI, Electrola thus became the merged entity's German subsidiary. Around 300 publications per month allowed Electrola's general catalogue to grow to 11,000 titles by 1934. At the end of 1939 Electrola - like the other German record labels - came under National Socialist administration. As a result, the most typical US jazz song "In the Mood" was no longer released. Recorded on 1 August 1939 it was released in the United States in September. During the Second World War, 80 per cent of the facilities in the German subsidiaries were destroyed, making it impossible to resume production immediately after the war. Electrola decided - not least because of the uncertain situation in Berlin - to move completely to Cologne.

On the site of the former Atlantic Gummi-Werke Aloys Weyers KG in Cologne-Braunsfeld, Maarweg 149, an area that could be expanded was found. The company was founded here in Cologne by being entered in the commercial register on 13 February 1952; the official relocation to Cologne took place on 8 September 1953. A modern recording studio was opened in 1956 on Maarweg in Cologne - where the records were also made - with all the associated technical rooms. In these studios all hits from Fred Bertelmann to Conny Froboess and Gitte Hænning, but also the last recordings with Marlene Dietrich up to the era of Herbert Grönemeyer, were produced. When the compact cassette came onto the market as a new sound carrier in 1965, an in-house music cassette (MC) production was also set up in 1966. This was the last investment by the Carl Lindström-Gesellschaft, which was merged into EMI Electrola GmbH on 30 November 1972.[1]

After a merger of EMI Ltd. with the British company Thorn Electrical Industries to Thorn EMI Ltd. in October 1979[2] but not acknowledged until 3 March 1980, the large corporation, represented in over 40 countries, was split in August 1996 into the two independently operating companies Thorn plc and EMI Group and listed on the British Stock Exchange. In June 1992, Thorn EMI bought the previously independent record label Virgin Records for a purchase price of US$957 million, ending intense competition for the company, which had many of the best-selling artists under contract.

In January 1994 another independent German company Intercord Tonträger was added, with which EMI was able to further expand its artist base, in 2000 the Intercord location in Stuttgart was closed, and the repertoire was mainly transferred to EMI Electrola GmbH & Co KG. In August 2000 the company moved from Maarweg to Cologne's media centre - the Mediapark; the data centre followed in December 2002. Earlier in spring 2002 EMI Electrola was renamed EMI Music Germany GmbH & Co. KG. After the Munich location was closed in April 2004, the Virgin label was merged with the Berlin-based labels Mute and Labels. Since then, the company has been operating at the two locations in Cologne and Berlin. Initially, EMI Music Germany was based at three locations in Munich (Virgin), Cologne (Capitol with pop and EMI Classics and Blue Note for jazz) and Berlin (Labels Germany and Mute); Virgin Records was absorbed into Labels and Mute in 2004. The centre of the German record industry, however, was Hamburg with the record labels Polydor, Teldec (Telefunken/Decca), Philips and Metronome.

After Electrola and the rest of EMI's German operations were sold to Universal Music Group (UMG) on 21 September 2012, when the European Commission (EC) gave its approval to the sale, UMG relocated the former EMI Music Germany from Cologne to Berlin later in December, with Electrola moved to Munich.[3] However, the EC compelled UMG to divest itself of EMI Classics, which operated with other European EMI assets to be divested as the Parlophone Label Group (PLG).[4] In February 2013, UMG sold PLG, including EMI Classics, to Warner Music Group (WMG).[5] The EC approved the deal in May, and WMG took control of EMI Classics on 1 July,[6] ceding it to Warner Classics.

Technical aspects

The company name "Electrola" is derived from the electrical recording process that was used for records from 1925 and is named after an electric record player from RCA Victor. Electrical recording meant turning away from the funnel to the microphone, to electrical needle recording and the corresponding playback. The advantages of "electrical recording" were higher volume, lower noise, no "funnel sound" on the recording side, extended frequency response, less bass and excessively center-stressed ("squeaky"), so overall more natural. Whereas before a recording frequency range of only 600 to 2000 Hz was possible, it was now between 100 and 5000 Hz. The number of revolutions was set consistently at 78 / min. Today those recordings that were made with the funnel are called "acoustic" recordings, everything later than "electrical" recordings. The shellac records used were fragile, had a speed of 78 rpm and a maximum playing time of approx. 3 minutes per side for a diameter of 25 cm and 4 minutes for a 30 cm diameter. There were about 4 grooves with a minimum width of 0.15 mm for every 1 mm. There was a regular spiral from the outside in.

In the early days, Electrola recordings were often made at the Singakademie Berlin. In 1927 the first electrical reproduction was possible in Germany; Electrola was already producing electrically recorded records in England from 1925, and in Germany from spring 1926.

Personnel

The energetic reconstruction in Cologne is thanks to Ladislaus Veder, who served as managing director until 1969. Jazz and classical music fan Max Ittenbach was appointed artistic director in 1956.

Nils Nobach worked for Electrola from 1953 as a producer and composer (often under the pseudonym Peter Ström), who became one of the most prominent hit producers of the time. He produced Bibi Johns,[7] Wolfgang Sauer,[8] Fred Bertelmann, Conny (1957), the Nilsen Brothers (1958), Angèle Durand,[9] Gitte Hænning, Rex Gildo (March 1959), and Adamo (1964). In November 1961 Nobach left Electrola and Heinz Gietz took over the position of production manager for pop.

Its debut was the "Hämmerchen-Polka", sung by Chris Howland in November 1961. Under his direction, the super hits "Zwei kleine Italiener" and "Lady Sunshine and Mister Moon" with Conny Froboess, "Speedy Gonzales" with Rex Gildo, "Motorbiene" with Benny Quick, and another of his own compositions, "Mimi Never Goes to Bed" with Bill Ramsey, were created under his direction in 1962 the top seller of the year. Gietz left Electrola in 1965, but continued to produce Electrola performers as a freelance producer (including the Lords). In 1968 the Cornet label, owned by Gietz, released the first record with the title "Mer schenken dä Ahl e couple Blömcher" from the Kölsch dialect group De Bläck Fööss.

See also

References

  1. Fischer, Martin (2006). Faszination Schellack: Grammophone, Schellackplatten, Nadeldosen (in German). Battenberg. ISBN 978-3-86646-008-9.
  2. "EMI: a giant at war with itself". Telegraph.co.uk. January 18, 2008.
  3. "UNIVERSAL MUSIC sichert Zukunft der EMI in Deutschland" (in German). Universal Music Group. December 5, 2012.
  4. "Parlophone Label Group's Kassler: 'We're effectively a mini major'". News168. March 27, 2011.
  5. "Warner to buy the Parlophone Label Group". Gtamophone. February 7, 2013.
  6. "Warner Music Group Completes Acquisition of Parlophone Label Group". Warner Music Group. July 1, 2013.
  7. "Die Literatur des Jahres 1951". Astronomischer Jahresbericht. December 31, 1954. doi:10.1515/9783112314692. ISBN 9783112314692.
  8. "Zweiter Abschnitt. Von den göttlichen Eigenschaften, welche sich auf das Abhängigkeitsgefühl, sofern sich noch kein Gegensatz darin entwickelt, beziehen. §§64—69", Der christliche Glaube nach den Grundsätzen der evangelischen Kirche im Zusammenhange dargestellt (1821/22), De Gruyter, pp. 188–225, December 31, 1980, doi:10.1515/9783110875201.188, ISBN 978-3-11-087520-1, retrieved June 9, 2021
  9. Hertwig, Niklas (April 9, 2021). ""Film ab!" Max von Allweyer und seine Schulfilm-Unternehmung". Urbane Kinokultur. Institut für Sächsische Geschichte und Volkskunde, Dresden. 2: 230–243. doi:10.25366/2021.19. ISBN 978-3-948620-01-1.



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.