ELEKTRA
RECORDS
Independent American label: The Elektra label was started by Jac Holzman in 1950.
At first it concentrated upon the fields of Folk, Ethnic music, Jazz and Gospel;
later on it expanded into Blues. Pop and Rock. Judy Collins was an important
signing for Elektra, in 1961); other notable signings followed: the mid '60s saw
the advent of Love, and the Doors, while Carly Simon arrived in 1970. Elektra
was sold to the Kinney Corporation in 1970 and became the 'E' of the big WEA
group when Kinney was renamed Warner Communications in 1971. The label continued
to flourish, and artists such as Bread, Television and the Cars kept it in the
charts throughout the '70s and early 80s. Elektra was combined with Asylum
in August 1973. In Britain, the Elektra label came in the scene in
1965. Its first single had a striking red and white label and was
pressed by Record Imports Ltd; for the second release, Phil Ochs's, 'I Ain't
Marching Any More', the design was changed completely and the colours were
altered to yellow and black, though numbering remained in the EKSN45-000s. For
the third and fourth releases the red-and-white label returned. From May
1967 a new, plainer, design was adopted; these labels were either orange with
black lettering or green label with silver lettering, the numbers dropped the
hyphen at this point and became just EKSN-45000. In August of that year
Polydor took over manufacture and distribution, and that company's name appeared
at the bottom of the label. In November 1968 the black printing became
silver. Around October 1969 the design altered slightly and the colours
changed again, this time to red with black and white printing. In March /
April 1970 Polydor changed to a seven-figure numbering system for all its
labels, and Elektra's EKSN-45000s became 2102-000s. Some later pressings
of Judy Collins's 'Amazing Grace' (2101-010) were injection-moulded. Polydor
retained the rights to that single in perpetuity after its agreement with
Elektra ended. Elektra was to move from Polydor to either CBS or Pye in the new
year the decision had been made and that CBS was to take over distribution
while Kinney handled marketing and promotion. After the move Elektra
singles were given a new 'caterpillar' label and an EK-45700 numerical
series). Promos from this period have the same hollow 'A' as Pye promos of
the time but haven't got Pye's 'ADVANCE PROMOTION COPY' lettering above
it. Kinney had plans to set up its own distribution network: a joint
venture with Island starting in July 1971 was considered but the idea was
abandoned. Instead it formed a joint pressing / distribution operation with CBS.
At the start of the agreement the EK-45700 numbering of Elektra singles was
replaced by a K-12000 one, though the label design remained the same, the other
members of the Kinney group were also given numbers in various K-00000 series.
Atlantic Records joined the Kinney group in March 1972, and Kinney underwent a
corporate name-change to WEA (Warner-Elektra-Atlantic) from the 1st of July
1972. A big shake-up of WEA was announced in 1973: as the result of an intiative
of its American parent it was to be split into four autonomous companies.
Elektra was one of them, and it gained a new head man in David Geffen, of Asylum
Records. In order to unite the two companies that were under his control
Geffen moved Elektra from CBS/WEA to EMI, which handled Asylum at that time; the
merger took place, with Nonesuch also joining in, and Elektra-Asylum-Nonesuch
Records was formed, with Geffen as chairman. At the time of the move the label
gained a reference to EMI Records at the left-hand side of the outer circle of
declarations, and perforated copies have the narrower perforations typical of
EMI singles (12). Catalogue numbers continued to be in the K-12000s.
Promos from this period have the usual EMI-style promo appearance. The licensing
agreement with EMI expired in the autumn of 1975. Geffen agreed a
six-month extension in the hope of securing a longer-term deal, but he moved on
to become vice-chairman of Warner Bros. Before the longer deal could be agreed,
and at the end of the six months his replacement, Joe Smith, took Elektra-Asylum
to join its WEA stable-mates, which it did in February 1976. Elektra-Asylum was
to cease to be autonomous and was to be run by a label manager from within WEA's
London headquarters. From the 1st of February Elektra and Asylum products
began to be manufactured and distributed by CBS, as the other WEA labels
were. A small 'W' and the equally miniscule legend 'A Warner
Communications Company' appeared on the right hand side of the label at the time
of the changeover. Again, catalogue numbers were unaffected. WEA was
continuing to think big, and it started its own distribution network, which was
fully operational by July 1977. The new network handled all the company's
labels, including Elektra, though CBS continued to be responsible for their
pressing. The Elektra label design and numbering remained unchanged during
the switch, and they were to stay the same for the rest of the '70s; the only
developments worthy of note took place in 1979 when singles on the Planet and
Asylum labels began sharing Elektra's catalogue numbers, In December 1977 WEA
acquired Island's pressing plant at West Drayton. Its manufacturing
agreement with CBS still had sixteen months to run, so in the meantime the
plant could only be used for third-party customers and WEA's own overflow work
but at the end of that period the company was able to start pressing its own
records. CBS pressings of WEA records continued to appear until at least the end
of 1978. As far as company sleeves are concerned, Elektra had its own orange one
for most of the Seventies. In 1971 and early '72, when Kinney was doing
its own distribution in co-operation with CBS, Elektra sleeves referred to
Kinney at the bottom, after the change of corporate name, in July 1972, the
'Kinney' was replaced by WEA. After the change of distributor to EMI,
sleeves referring to WEA were initially given gold 'Re-Distributed by EMI
Records' stickers. Around 1978 WEA adopted a common sleeve for all its
labels and Elektra singles began to appear in those. The design of the
common sleeve changed in 1979. A 'Treasured Tracks' series of Elektra and
Asylum singles was issued on the 20th of August 1976, in a special sleeve; the
actual labels didn't carry any reference to the series's name. The discography
below as usual, it is peppered with holes. Quite a number of these
holes are caused by the records with those numbers only being issued
overseas. Thanks to Robert Lyons For The Info.
A FULL
DISCOGRAPHY OF THE ELEKTRA 12000 SERIES 1971-1982 CAN BE FOUND HERE
72
Various
Artists
Mickey Newbury, Plainsong, Harry
Chapin At Queen Elizabeth Hall
ELEKTRA
SAM
8