Brunswick

Profile:

US label; also appears as "Brunswick Records".
Label Code: LC 0136 / LC 00136
For all Unofficial / Bootleg release of this label please use Brunswick (2)
Brunswick is an active American record label founded in 1916.
The company first began producing phonographs in 1916, then began marketing their own line of records as an after-thought. These first Brunswick Records used the vertical cut system (like Edison Disc Records), and were not sold in large numbers. They were recorded in the US but sold only in Canada. Records under the "Brunswick" label were first produced by the Brunswick-Balke-Collender Company. In 1920, a new line of Brunswick Records were introduced in the US and Canada that employed the lateral cut system that was then becoming the default cut for 78 disc records. In late 1924, Brunswick acquired the Vocalion (2) Records label. In the spring of 1925 Brunswick introduced its own version of electrical recording (licensed from General Electric) using photoelectric cells, which Brunswick eventually called the "Light-Ray Process" .

In April 1930, Brunswick-Balke-Collender sold Brunswick Records to Warner Bros., who then leased the entire Brunswick record operation to the Columbia.

In 1943, Decca revived the Brunswick label, mostly for reissues of recordings from earlier decades. After World War II, American Coral Records subsidiary. That same year, Brunswick resumed releasing new material, focusing on Rock and Roll.

Starting in the latter part of the 1950s and well into the 1970s, the label was recording more R&B/soul acts. Beginning with Jackie Wilson’s first hit “Reet Petite” in 1957, Brunswick introduced numerous hits to the R&B and Pop charts for nearly 20 years, by artists such as T-Bone Walker, and many more.

Between the mid 60s and the mid 70s, Brunswick Records was one of America’s leading R&B record companies. From its studio office on Michigan Avenue, Brunswick employed some of Chicago’s best writers, producers and musicians to create a large portion of what was being played on R&B radio during that period.

By the time Brunswick stopped producing new product in 1982, the company had racked up more than 150 Billboard charted singles.

In 1995 the Brunswick label was revived by Paul and Mara Tarnopol, the children of Nat Tarnopol.

The music has been reincarnated through sampling by artists such as Beyoncé was created by sampling the hook of the recording “Are You My Woman” by the Chi-Lites.

Some of their singles, pressed at different pressing plants, can be identified by symbols as follows
◆ & 2 = Decca or MCA Pressing Plant, Pinckneyville
✤ & 1 = Decca or MCA Pressing Plant, Gloversville
◈ & 3 = Decca or MCA Pressing Plant, Richmond

45 RPM Catalog Number, Date and Label Identification:
55000 through 55166 (1957–1960): Maroon label.
55167 through 55250 (1960–1963): Orange label.
55251 and higher (1963 forward): Black label with multicolored
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Parent Label:

Brunswick Record Corporation

Sublabels:

Brunswick Radio Of Argentina Inc., ...

Info:

Brunswick Record Corporation
157 E. Franklin St., Suite 5
Chapel Hill, NC 27514
U.S.A.

Phone: #1 (984) 999 4191
Fax: #1 (984) 999 4339
E-Mail: info[at]brunswickrecords.com

For licensing requests outside North America please Demon Music Group Ltd in London, United Kingdom, which exclusively represents the label on behalf of Ms Mara Tarnopol at Brunswick Records - [email protected]

Manufacturer

Brunswick 157 E. Franklin St., Suite 5 Chapel Hill, NC 27514 USA https://discogs.librosgratis.biz/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection" class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="076e696168476575726974706e646c756264687563742964686a">[email protected]

Manufacturer EU

Universal Music Group Europe 's-Gravelandseweg 80 1217 EW Hilversum THE NETHERLANDS https://discogs.librosgratis.biz/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection" class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="9af9f5f7f7eff4f3f9fbeef3f5f4e9daeff7efe9f3f9b4f9f5f7">[email protected]

Links:

brunswickrecords.com , Wikipedia , jerryosborne.com , Google

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