- Paramount Records
Paramount Records was an American
record label , best known for its recordings ofAfrican-American jazz andblues in the 1920s and early 1930s, including such artists asMa Rainey andBlind Lemon Jefferson .Paramount Records was founded in the 1910s as a subsidiary of the
Wisconsin Chair Company ofPort Washington, Wisconsin , Fred Dennett Key, director.Barlow, William. "Looking Up At Down": The Emergence of Blues Culture". Temple University Press (1989), p. 131. ISBN 0-87722-583-4.] The chair company had made some woodenphonograph cabinets by contract forEdison Records . Wisconsin Chair decided to start making its own line of phonographs with a subsidiary called the "United Phonograph Corporation" at the end of 1915. It made phonographs under the "Vista" brand name through the end of the decade; the line failed commercially.In 1918 a line of phonograph
gramophone record s was debuted with the "Paramount" label. They were recorded and pressed by Chair Company subsidiary "The New York Recording Laboratories, Incorporated", which despite its name was located in the same Wisconsin factory complex as the parent concern (advertisements, however, stated somewhat misleadingly, "Paramounts are recorded in our own New York laboratory").In its initial years, the Paramount label fared only slightly better than the "Vista Phonograph" line. The product had little to distinguish itself. Paramount offered recordings of standard pop-music fare, on records recorded with below-average audio fidelity pressed in below-average quality
shellac . In the early 1920s, Paramount was still racking up debts for the Chair Company while producing no net profit. Paramount began offering to press records for other companies at low prices.The Paramount Record pressing plant was contracted to press discs for
Black Swan Records . When that later company floundered, Paramount bought out Black Swan and thus got into the business of making recordings by and for African-Americans. These so-called "race music " records became Paramount's most famous and lucrative business.Paramount's "race record" series was launched in 1922 with a few
vaudeville blues songs byLucille Hegamin andAlberta Hunter . It had a large mail-order operation that was a key to its early success.Most of Paramount's race music recordings were arranged by Black entrepreneur
J. Mayo Williams . "Ink" Williams had no official position with Paramount, but was given wide latitude to bring African-American talent to Paramount recording studios and to market Paramount records to African-American consumers. Williams did not know at the time that the "race market" had become Paramount's prime business, and he was essentially keeping the label afloat.Problems with low audio fidelity and poor pressings continued.
Blind Lemon Jefferson 's big 1926 hit, "Got the Blues" and "Long Lonesome Blues", had to be hurriedly rerecorded in the superior facilities ofMarsh Laboratories and subsequent releases used that version; since both versions appear on compilation albums, they may be compared.In 1927, Mayo Williams moved to competitor
OKeh records , taking Blind Lemon Jefferson with him for just one recording, the now classic "Matchbox Blues ". Paramount's recording of the same song can be compared with OKeh's on compilation albums, to Paramount's detriment.The
Great Depression drove many record companies out of business, and the initial incarnation of Paramount closed down in 1935.In 1942 the then-inactive Paramount Records company was purchased from Wisconsin Chair Company by
John Steiner , who revived the label for reissues of important historical Paramount recordings as well as new recordings of jazz and blues. In 1952, Steiner leased reissue rights to a newly-formed jazz label, Riverside Records, which reissued a substantial number of 10" and then 12" LPs by many of the blues singers in the Paramount catalog, as well as instrumental jazz by such Chicago-based notables as Jelly Roll Morton, King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band (which included a very young Louis Armstrong), Johnny Dodds, Muggsy Spanier, and Meade Lux Lewis. Riverside remained active until 1964.The rights to the portion of Paramount's back catalogue not yet in the
public domain were next acquired byGeorge H. Buck in 1970. Buck continues to reissue Paramount recordings as part of hisJazzology Records group, but use of the name "Paramount Records" was purchased from Buck byParamount Pictures , a previously unconnected company.As happened with a number of record companies in the Great Depression, the majority of Paramount's metal masters were sold for their
scrap metal value. Some of the company's recordings were said to have been thrown into theMilwaukee River by disgruntled employees when the record company was closing down. In 2006 an episode ofPBS television show "History Detectives " had local divers searching the river to try to find Paramount masters and unsold 78's, but they were unsuccessful. [ [http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=433539 Journal Sentinel article] ]ee also
*
List of record labels
* ParamountNotes
External links
* [http://www.paramountshome.org/ ParamountsHome.org]
* [http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/paramount Online Paramount Discography at the Mills Music Library, University of Wisconsin-Madison]
* [http://www.bsnpubs.com/dot/paramountwis.html Paramount Album Discography] mostly on later Paramount; has some of the label's history wrong
* [http://www.ralphdeluca.com/web/old-records-78-rpm Paramount 78 Rpm Records]
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