[78-L] King Cole [was Walter Winchell]
Han Enderman
jcenderman at solcon.nl
Thu Nov 25 15:48:59 PST 2010
Ammor, replaced by Excelsior & Exclusive, were labels of Californian (black)
brothers Leon & Otis Rene. A later label is Class.
Look at the many Leon Rene compostions on these labels.
The small & rare Ammor label was the first (& is listed by Ty).
I assume that AMO prefixes are from the time this label existed.
The Coles on Ammor are credited to King Cole, and not to the Trio.
Excelsior 102-103 (coupled) - recd in Oct 1942 - is on Cap 139.
Then Ammor did not record anymore, though some issues may have been still available.
Han Enderman
===
>>>
On 11/24/2010 8:54 PM, Steven wrote:
> From: David Lennick
>> Savoy also had two early King Cole sides which it acquired from Varsity
>> which
> acquired them from Ammor.
>>
> The provenance of those KC3 sides is hopelessly complicated...! Cole, living
> on the west coast, seems to have cut them for the little-known (and
> failing?!)
> Ammor label (Californian!).When Cole's Decca sides became "hits," any
> number of labels reissued his pre-WWII sides (including a number of
> transcription sides?!).
True, although the one transcription company involved was D&S and they seem to
have issued their recordings commercially as 78s and simultaneously to radio
stations as transcriptions. I've seen other examples from them.
>
> This was the VERY tail end of an era when labels signed artists to
> "exclusive"
> contracts whenever possible. Many well-known artists chose to continue as
> independents...earning a fixed (and often low!) sum per issued recording!
>
In Cole's case, he was signed to Capitol during the ban and the label was so
anxious to get something out by the Trio, they bought a couple of masters that
had been recorded for Excelsior in 1942. Some of Cole's Excelsior sides have
AMO matrix numbers, so Ammor may still have been on the scene in 1943..or not..
dl
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