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| Philips Records | |
|---|---|
| Parent company | Universal Music Group Previously Philips (1950–1962) PolyGram (1962–1999) |
| Founded | 1950; 76 years ago (1950) (as Philips Phonographische Industrie) |
| Founder | Philips |
| Status | Dormant |
| Distributors | Decca Music Group Verve Label Group Island Records Universal Music Group |
| Genre | Various |
| Country of origin | Netherlands |
| Location | Amsterdam,Netherlands |
| Official website | deccaclassics |
Philips Records was arecord label founded byDutch electronics companyPhilips and in 1999 was absorbed intoDutch-American music corporationUniversal Music Group. It was founded as Philips Phonographische Industrie in 1950. In 1946, Philips acquired the company which pressed records for British Decca's Dutch outlet in Amsterdam.
The record label originated as "Philips Phonographische Industrie" (PPI) in June 1950 when it began issuingclassical music recordings. Recordings were also made of popular artists of multiple nationalities and of classical artists from Germany, France and the Netherlands. Launched under the slogan "Records of the Century" (referring to Philips Industries' UK Head Office at Century House, W1), the first releases in Britain appeared in January 1953 on 10" 78 rpm discs, with LPs appearing in July 1954.
Philips also distributed recordings made by the United StatesColumbia Records (which at the time was a unit ofCBS) in the UK and on the European continent. After the separation of the English Columbia label (owned byEMI) and American Columbia, Philips also started distributing original Columbia recordings on the Philips label in the UK.
The first batch of eight singles releases in 1953 included British artists such asGilbert Harding,Flanagan and Allen andGracie Fields, followed by American Columbia recording artistsJo Stafford,Frankie Laine andJohnnie Ray. The first single on the label to chart was Frankie Laine's "I Believe", which reached the No. 1 chart position in the UK that April. Many of the first British recordings on the label were produced byNorman Newell untilJohn Franz was appointed artists and repertoire (A&R) manager in 1954.
In 1958, Philips created a subsidiary label,Fontana Records, which meant that American-Columbia recordings were being issued on both the Philips and Fontana labels. This arrangement lasted until April 1962, when, under pressure from Columbia in America, Philips then created a third label for them, CBS Records (it could not name the label Columbia as the copyright for that name had long been owned by EMI). In late 1964, under the stewardship of U.S. President of Columbia RecordsGoddard Lieberson,CBS Records formed its own international operations, adopting the name of its then parentCBS. CBS Records set up their UK operation in Theobalds Road in Holborn. Singles and albums on the Philips and Fontana labels by Columbia-owned product were subsequently deleted from the catalogue.
In 1962, Philips Records andDeutsche Grammophon formed the Grammophon-Philips Group joint venture (GPG), which later becamePolyGram in 1972. UK pressings were manufactured at the company's large factory based at Walthamstow in N.E. London.
In 1961, after Philips lost its US and Canadian distribution deal with Columbia Records, it entered an exchange agreement withMercury Records.[1] A year later, Philips' US affiliateConsolidated Electronics Industries Corp. (a.k.a.Conelco), bought Mercury and its subsidiary labels, such asSmash. Philips classical, jazz and pop records were now marketed by Mercury in the US under the Philips label. The Mercury Living Presence team also made classical recordings for Philips, in July 1961. These records, made in Walthamstow Town Hall near London, included Liszt piano concertos bySviatoslav Richter and theLondon Symphony Orchestra conducted byKiril Kondrashin; two albums of symphonic "bon-bons" by the London Symphony Orchestra andCharles Mackerras released as "Kaleidoscope"; "Russian Song Recital" byGalina Vishnevskaya andMstislav Rostropovich; and Beethoven sonata op. 69 for cello and piano by Richter and Rostropovich. The Richter Liszt album was recorded on 3-track 35mm magnetic film and was reissued on CD from a remaster made from the film by original producerWilma Cozart Fine, (wife of the recording engineerBob) as part of the Philips Solo series.[2]
Classical groups that Philips heavily recorded included theRoyal Concertgebouw Orchestra, theBeaux Arts Trio, and theQuartetto Italiano. ViolinistArthur Grumiaux and the pianistsClaudio Arrau,Stephen Kovacevich,Mitsuko Uchida andAlfred Brendel were under contract to Philips. Symphony orchestras under contract, including the LSO, were under the command of prestigious young conductors such as Colin Davis andBernard Haitink.
From 1961 until the late 1980s, Philips Records (USA) issued many classical titles in US-specific packaging, initially in the same glossy-laminated covers as Mercury Records. The records were pressed at Mercury's plant in Richmond, Indiana, and mastered in New York by George Piros at Fine Recording, using 2-track and mono master tapes provided by Philips. These releases were the PHS 900 xxx series for stereo and the 500 xxx series for mono. Clair Van Ausdal in Mercury's New York office oversaw the Philips classical US releases through the mid-1960s.
Philips also launched an eponymous jazz label in the US, releasing both imported European Philips recordings and making new American recordings ofGerry Mulligan,Dizzy Gillespie andWoody Herman, among others. These records were made through Mercury's existing jazz operations and produced byJack Tracy and others.
In addition to jazz and classical music, Philips also became a major label in the world of rock and pop music in the late 1950s until late 1970s. In the UK, Philips developed a strong popular music roster, signing acts likeMarty Wilde,Roy Castle,Anne Shelton,the Four Pennies,the Springfields,Dusty Springfield, andthe Walker Brothers. The American pop label was launched in 1962 starting with the R&B single "Gee Baby" by Ben & Bea as well as folk-country, like "Makes You Wanna Sigh" by Ross Legacy in 1969. It signed theFour Seasons in 1964. It also played a part in promoting thegarage rock genre and thepsychedelic rock genre in the mid to late 1960s, their most successful signing beingBlue Cheer.[citation needed]
In the UK during the 1960s and 1970s, Philips turned its attention more to the growingmiddle-of-the-road market with artists likeLena Zavaroni,Peters and Lee,Nana Mouskouri andDemis Roussos, as well as issuing novelty records by media personalities likeEd Stewart,Bruce Forsyth, Dave Allen andChris Hill. In 1970, Philips, Fontana,Mercury Records, and the newly formedVertigo Records were amalgamated into a new company calledPhonogram. In Europe, however, Philips was used on a major basis and it became the outlet forSire Records in America and distributed a number of punk and new wave bands likeTalking Heads,the Ramones, andRadio Birdman, who were signed from Australia. It also released some disco records byDonna Summer andthe Village People, as their home labelCasablanca Records was not cleared for use in all countries around the world. Another important American label signing for the UK was Avco Records, which provided Phonogram with one of their best-selling U.S. acts, the Stylistics. By late 1979 Phonogram signed Dire Straits to the Vertigo label. The band sold huge numbers of records all over Europe and were chosen to promote the initial release of CDs in 1985, with a nationwide road tour in association with Philips/Sony Industries.
By 1980, PolyGram consolidated all of its U.S. operations, Phonogram, Inc.Mercury Records,RSO, Casablanca andPolydor Records and associated labels intoPolyGram Records and it was based in New York City. Under the new company, PolyGram decided to discontinue Philips as a pop and rock label in the UK and throughout much of Europe, though it still frequently issued records in France and South East Asia by Chinese and Hong Kong pop artists. The majority of PolyGram's rock and pop music signings went to Mercury, and Polydor in the UK and Europe, though the label was used sparingly in America. Philips became part of PolyGram Classics as a classical music label along withDecca Records andDeutsche Grammophon. Most artists were moved toMercury Records or other local PolyGram-owned labels.
From the early 1970s, Philips classical records were no longer being produced in the US; rather they were made in the Netherlands and sold as imports in the American market. Philips reissued a group of Mercury Living Presence titles as "Mercury Golden Imports", with manufacture in the Netherlands and masters cut from 2-track production tapes, as opposed to the original-issue method of mixing stereo LPs directly from the edited 3-track master tapes and films.
In the 1980s,Philips Classics Records was formed to distribute its classical artists, although classical recordings have also been issued on the regular Philips label. In the US, Philips eventually handled distribution and sales for Philips, Mercury, British Decca (sold under the London label in the US) and Deutsche Grammophon.
After the sale of PolyGram to Vivendi/Seagram, all PolyGram-labels - including Philips and Decca - became part of theUniversal Music Group.
In 1983, Philips became one of the first record labels to issuecompact discs usingdigital recordings that had been made since 1978.[3]
Philips and its subsidiaries eventually re-issued many of its pre-digital stereo and mono recordings on compact disc. Philips and DuPont partnered in four CD manufacturing plants in Hanover, Germany; Blackburn in the UK (formerly the Philips Laservision Disc factory); Kings Mountain in North Carolina, and Louviers in France. By the mid-1990s, PolyGram Classics handled the classical labels (Philips, Mercury, Decca, Deutsche Grammophon) andVerve Music Group handled the jazz back catalogue (from Verve, Mercury, etc.) and new jazz releases. Island Records absorbed Mercury in 2014 and in doing so, Island has continued to manage the Philips pop back catalogue to this day.
Philips Records has been part ofUniversal Music since 1998, the name continuing to be licensed from the label's former parent company. In 1999, Philips Classics was absorbed into theDecca Music Group, and Philips recording and mastering operations in the Netherlands were shut down. Former employees bought the Philips Recording Center in Baarn, Netherlands, and formed Polyhymnia International (a recording and mastering company) andPentatone Records (which specializes inSACD releases).[4]
Many of the Philips classical recordings have been reissued on the Eloquence label. Universal also released a "Philips 50" series marking the 50th anniversary of Philips Records in the early 2000s; some of those CDs are still in print. Pentatone has released PhilipsQuadraphonic sound recordings from the early and mid-1970s in 4-channel SACD format, as their RQR Series.[5]
Philips' classical catalog was issued on CD under the headingsDigital Classics,Legendary Classics andSilver Line Classics. Many of these titles have been reissued on the Decca label.
The "Philips Connoisseur Collection" issuedworld music and other genres.