- Roméo Beaudry
Louis Roméo Beaudry (
February 25 ,1882 -May 6 ,1932 ) was aFrench Canadian author ,composer ,pianist andrecord producer , who established Éditions Radio and served as the director general of theStarr Records company of Canada as a music producer. As a composer Beaudry wrote more than 75 songs which went on to be recorded.Career
Born in
Montreal , Beaudry grew up primarily inQuebec City .cite web|url = http://www.collectionscanada.ca/gramophone/m2-1057-e.html|title = Roméo Beaudry, author, composer, pianist and administrator (1882-1932)|publisher = Collections Canada|author = Robert Thérien|accessdate = 2007-10-18] After finishing his schooling at theQuebec Seminary cite journal|url = http://www.collectioncanada.ca/gramophone/m2-150-e.php?uid=m2-nlc006513&uidc=recKey|title = Sudden Passing of L. R. Beaudry in Montreal|journal = Canadian Music and Radio Trades Journal|date = May 1932] in 1900, he obtained a job at theNational Bank of Canada . Beaudry soon left that job to become a partner in his father's music store,Willis Piano Company .In 1912 Beaudry obtained a sales representative job with
Starr Records which required him to move to Montreal. While in Montreal he obtained a job as a music critic for "La Patrie " as well.In 1915, the
Columbia Gramophone Company of New York requested that Beaudry put them into contact withQuébécois artists in the hopes they could obtainFrench language music for their francophone customers inNew England . Beaudry did so, andJean-Marie Magnan ,Joseph-Henri Thibodeau ,Hector Pellerin ,François-Xavier Mercier ,Damase DuBuisson ,Alfred Nohcor andHonoré Vaillancourt all recorded with Columbia as a result of these efforts.In 1918, the
Starr Piano Company ofRichmond, Indiana set up a Canadian branch named theStarr Company of Canada . Beaudry was hired as the director general of the company on the strength of his existing relationship with the Starr company and his knowledge of music and musicians in Quebec. During that time, he became a close business associate withHerbert Berliner . In 1919, Beaudry awarded the contract for pressing records from Starr's subsidiaryGennett Records for all of Canada to Berliner's Compo pressing factory. In 1920, he foundedStarr Phonograph of Quebec which used Berliner's recording studios to record francophone artists under the Gennett label. [cite journal|url = http://www.capsnews.org/apn2007-4.htm|title = Why the Difference Is in the Tone: The Starr-Gennett Legacy|author = Elizabeth Surles|date = July/August 2007|publisher = Canadian Antique Phonograph Society|journal = Antique Phonograph News] Berliner formed a new record company in 1921, first called Sun, but quickly renamedApex Records , which began producing records for the Starr 12000 series in July 1921. Apex began selling records at 65¢ each, and with the same production Starr also sold records at 65¢ each. The other major record sellers in Quebec, Columbia and His Master's Voice, priced their records at 85¢. This competitive pricing scheme led to the Quebec music market being dominated by Starr.Around 1920, Beaudry began a collaboration with
J Hervey Germain , who recorded eighteen of Beaudry's songs between 1920 and 1925, including: "Au revoir Mimi, non pas adieu" (1920), "Au printemps ma Lizon" (1921), "Nos vieux parents" (1921), "Rien qu’un baiser" (1921), "Mimi printemps" (1921), "N’oubliez pas" (1922), "La rose du boulevard" (1922), "Le sheik d’Arabie" (1922), "Ah! Ce qu’il a le nez gros" (1923), "Bonjour ma ninette" (1923), "Ma jolie danseuse" (1923), "Mon ami m’a volé mon amour" (1924), "Printemps d’amour" (1924), "Riez un peu et tout ira bien" (1924), "Une fille que les hommes oublient" (1924), "Il est quelque part mon cœur" (1925) and "Je ne veux plus pleurer pour toi" (1925).Hercule Lavoie began recordings songs written by Beaudry in 1924, recording more than a dozen songs of Beaudry's over the next few years. These included "L’amour pardonne" (1924), "L’amour se souvient" (1924), "Berce mon rêve" (1924), "Chante rossignol chante" (1924), "Dis-le moi" (1924), "Hier, aujourd’hui, demain" (1925), "Il ne faut pas pleurer pour ça" (1925), "J’ai toujours vingt ans" (1925), "Mais si tu reviens un jour" (1925), "Laisse-moi te dire" (1926), "Il fallait des anges au paradis" (1927), "Pour quelqu’un qu’on aime" (1927) and "Tu prends plaisir à me voir souffrir" (1927).In 1925, Compo purchased Starr Phonograph of Quebec and Beaudry remained with the company. During this time most of the prominent singers in Quebec appeared on the Starr label. Beaudry's most insightful move may have been supporting
Mary Bolduc in spite of the lack of success on her first release, "Y'a longtemps que je couche par terre". [cite web|title = La Bolduc -- "The Queen of Canadian Folksingers"|url = http://www.collectionscanada.ca/4/4/m2-1032-e.html|date = 2005-07-18|publisher = Collections Canada] The sale of Bolduc's records would later be critical to the survival of Starr through theGreat Depression .Beaudry died in Outremont of a
heart attack onMay 6 ,1932 .References
External links
* [http://www2.bnquebec.ca/musique_78trs/mi14.htm Recordings by Georges Beauchemin, which include several songs written by Roméo Beaudry]
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