MGM Records

defunct American record label

Parent label: Polydor·Est. 1946

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American label MGM Records, or MGM (short for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer), was launched in 1946 by Loew's Incorporated Label Code: LC 0269 / LC 00269. In March 1959 they celebrated with their MGM Records 12th Anniversary Celebration Series MGM Records is a division of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc. First release - Mam'selle / Sleepy Time Gal In October 1958, they released their first stereo disks. For all Unofficial / Bootleg releases, please use . Common variations: M-G-M, M. G. M, M.G.M., M⸝G⸝M, M·G·M Key owners / parent companies: Loew's Incorporated (1946—1959) | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc. (1959—c. 1971) | PolyGram (1972—'75) | Polydor (1975—1982) Current label owner according to GVL: [b]Universal Music Entertainment GmbH[/b] (company not in Discogs). Current re-issue rightsholders: >>Soundtracks: Rhino Records (2) via Rhino Movie Music. Preceded by MCA Records (1986) and CBS Special Products (1982—'86). >>Pop and [I]Country[/i]: Island Records via Polydor, Mercury, and Mercury Nashville Distribution outside North America was via Electric & Musical Industries Ltd. (EMI) from August 1947 until the mid-1960s. ----------------------------------------- Throughout its history, MGM used several format prefixes, center label designs, and typefaces that allow approximate dating of the releases. CATALOG NO'S PREFIXES US 45 RPM prefixes K: 7" singles, 1949—Feb 1974 M: 7" singles, Feb '74—1976 X: 7" EPs SK: Stereo 'Special Edition' 7" singles, 1959—?? KGC: Golden Circle 7" singles, 1956—?? LP prefixes E: Mono LPs, 1953—approx. 1958 E/SE: "faux"/re-channeled Stereo LPs, 1958—?? (often in Mono jackets with an attached sticker) SE: Stereo LPs, 1959—'74 CH: Mono Children's CHS: Stereo Children's Stereo LPs (since 1974) M3 MG MB ----------------------------------------- METROLITE NON-BREAKABLE 78 RPM 10" singles From circa 1947 till approx. 1956, M-G-M pressed some 78 RPM 10" records on a proprietary vinyl formulation called "Metrolite." (Around the time, many competing labels marketed similar types of "non-breakable" materials: Decca's [I]Deccalite[/i], Mercury's [I]Merco Plastic[/i], or Savoy's [I]Sav-o-flex[/i]). If the center label reads METROLITE Non-Breakable (typically with a caption 'Under Normal Use' printed below, or with an ® symbol)—please use Vinyl as the 'Format' and mention it in 'Release Notes' when submitting. If the 'Metrolite' isn't mentioned, the format is most likely Shellac. Example Dear John / Cold, Cold Heart Quick Reference Format: Vinyl (in the "dropdown" list) Size: 10" Speed: 78 RPM [I]Free Text[/i]: Do Not include 'Metrolite' In case both shellac and Metrolite/vinyl pressings exist, submit them separately (within the same Master Release). ----------------------------------------- CENTER LABELS 1940-'59: 1st-generation—"black-on-yellow" with inverted [I]M〜G〜M[/i] and "contoured" lion's head. 1959-'68: 2nd-generation—"silver-on-black" with rainbow M⸝G⸝M and full-colored "movie"-style lion's head. 1968-'82: 3rd-generation—"blue-and-gold" yin-yang with a blue [I]MGM Records[/i] logo and black "modernized Leo" lion's head. 45 RPM Catalog Number, Date and Label Identification: 10000 through 12828 (1949–1959): Yellow label. 12829 and higher (1959 forward): Black label. MGM switched to a blue and yellow label somewhere around 14000 (1969), but we can't pinpoint the exact changeover number. 55000 series (1955–1956): Yellow label. Numbers prior to the beginning of 45 production are reissues of material first issued on 78 rpms. Bottom-rim text Until approx. Oct 1960: M-G-M Records–A Division Of Loew's Incorporated–Made in U.S.A. In 1952, Loew's Incorporated was required to divest itself of the MGM studio and "spin it off" into its own new company, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc., as a result of the United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc. Supreme Court ruling. Because of Loew's' elaborate corporate structure, however, the separation process didn't finalize until late 1959. Oct '60—1971: M-G-M Records–A Division Of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc.–Made in U.S.A. The 'M-G-M' spelling later changed to M.G.M Records, and subsequently to MGM Records May '72—approx. 1976 (after the PolyGram takeover): Manufactured by MGM Records, Inc., 7165 Sunset Boulevard, Hollywood, Calif. 90046 1976—1982: Manufactured And Marketed By Polydor Incorporated/810 Seventh Avenue/New York, N.Y. 10019 ----------------------------------------- [u]TYPEFACES[/u] Variations in the center label's text—publishers, impressum, catalog and matrix numbers, and songwriters/personnel. Identifiable features include: ✪ Name Variations—e.g. Burdon versus E. Burdon or Eric Burdon (conventions could differ with 2-3 songwriters, longer/unusual names, etc.) ✪ Outline—whether the text is regular or bold ✪ Vertical Alignment—numbers/symbols printed closer to the top, center, or bottom edge of the hole (particularly for 7" singles/EPs with a 1½" hub). Pressing PlantsMGM Record Manufacturing Division in Bloomfield, NJ, used typeset from Pace Press, NYC: Surnames-only, text printed at the hole's lower edge—Example no. 1, No. 2 ◇ always had an explicit copyright, typically "Manuf'd by Reverse Producers Corporation." Alignment and typeface varied over the years—ExampleMonarch Record Mfg. Co. with typeset by Alco Research And Engineering, Co., Los Angeles, CA: Aligned to the center, full names (e.g. [I]Bobby Hebb[/i])—ExampleSouthern Plastics, Nashville, TN: Text aligned to the center, different name variations (e.g. [I]Ronald Blackwell[/i] but [I]Gibson[/i], or [I]B. Crewe[/i])—Example no. 1, No. 2H.V. Waddell Co. (pressed for MGM in 1950—'66), Burbank, CA: Text aligned to the bottom, only surnames (similar to Pace Press). Waddell pressings featured a thicker typeface and "bubble"-ish textured ink. Some editions had a "deepened" ring around center holes—Example no. 1, No. 2 ◇ , Chicago, IL: Text aligned to the center, used full names; notable for narrow typeface—Example In some instances, one release could have multiple pressings, e.g. MGM's New Jersey "domestic" plant, H.V. Waddell, Midwest Record Pressings, and Reverse Producers Corp. ----------------------------------------- HISTORY The label's output was originally soundtrack recordings from MGM movies (featuring the likes of Judy Garland, Jane Powell, and Gene Kelly) but quickly included other musical genres. One of the label's earliest stars was Hank Williams (from 1949 until 1953) as MGM had placed some emphasis on country and western music. As the 1950s progressed, MGM had signed a number of major talents including Conway Twitty, Billy Eckstine, Art Mooney, Joni James and Connie Francis (who would be the longest-serving artist on the label, recording from 1957 until 1973 but still releasing albums until the label's demise). By 1953, MGM Records was considered a major label alongside Columbia, Mercury, Decca, Capitol and Coral. It launched the Cub subsidiary in 1956 and expanded into jazz by buying Verve Records from its founder Norman Granz in December 1960. It became the American distributor for Deutsche Grammophon in 1962 (losing those rights when Polydor opened its US branch in 1969), expanded Verve into rock (The Righteous Brothers, the The Velvet Underground, Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention) and folk (Janis Ian, Richie Havens, Tim Hardin) music and became the distributor of Kama Sutra Records. By the late 1960s, the label was beginning to experience many internal and sales problems (the studio's unrealistic sales goals for the label in spite of large numbers of unsold LPs winding up in the cut-out bins; the colossal failure of the Alan Lorber-created 1968-69 "Bosstown Sound" marketing campaign; contractual problems with unsuccessful producers; MGM's habitual censoring of music, sitting on finished masters and releasing albums without artist approval didn't help matters). MGM Records president Mike Curb infamously dropped eighteen poor-selling acts from the label, citing pro-drug lyrics in their music. This gave the future Lieutenant Governor of California a commendation from President Richard M. Nixon for his anti-drug stance. In this area, around 1970, the label was distributed and manufactured by Curb's 'Transcontinental Record Corporation', commonly abridged to TRC (2). Curb righted the label's fortunes by giving it a more family entertainment-oriented focus, with The Osmonds becoming their biggest stars and by signing Petula Clark, Wayne Newton and Sammy Davis, Jr.; it also delved into the era's bubblegum pop (The Cowsills, Daddy Dewdrop), country (Hank Williams, Jr., Jim Stafford, C.W. McCall, Mel Tillis) and soul music (Lou Rawls, Johnny Bristol). In May 1972, MGM's then-owner, hotel and real estate magnate Kirk Kerkorian sold the label to PolyGram, including a ten-year lease on the MGM logo and perpetual rights to the MGM Records name. In 1975, MGM Records was de-emphasized and all of the acts still signed to the label were transferred to Polydor, which had by then become its parent label; it soon became an outlet for MGM soundtrack album releases and back catalog reissues until the label was shut down for good in 1982. The reissue rights to the MGM film soundtracks were licensed to CBS Special Products in 1982 and were later passed on to MCA Records in 1986, where its releases of roughly 100 of them were the last vinyl LP versions; the rights to the classic MGM film soundtracks now reside with Rhino Records (2) which has been releasing restored and expanded CD versions on its Rhino Movie Music imprint in association with Turner Classic Movies. The MGM pop and country catalogs are currently managed by The Island Music Group via Polydor, Mercury Records, and Mercury Nashville, respectively. Labels distributed by MGM For much of its history, MGM distributed a number of smaller labels, many of which only lasted a couple of releases. A few exceptions include Kama Sutra (which became a sister label to Buddah Records in 1969); Andy Williams' Barnaby Records (a brief interim deal in 1973 as it was changing distribution from CBS to Janus) and Roy Acuff's Hickory Records (which switched distribution to ABC Records after a three-year period).

Discography

10,304 albums
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The Velvet Underground And Nico

The Velvet Underground & Nico · 1967

Studio Album

Love Over Gold

Dire Straits · 1982

Studio Album

Getz / Gilberto

Stan Getz / João Gilberto Featuring Antonio Carlos Jobim · 1964

Studio Album

White Light/White Heat

The Velvet Underground · 1968

Studio Album

The Velvet Underground

Velvet Underground · 1969

Studio Album

B’Day

Beyoncé · 2006

Studio Album

Jazz Samba

Stan Getz / Charlie Byrd · 1962

Studio Album

Abracadabra

Steve Miller Band · 1982

Studio Album

Night Train

The Oscar Peterson Trio · 1963

Studio Album

We're Only In It For The Money

The Mothers Of Invention · 1968

Studio Album

Absolutely Free

The Mothers Of Invention · 1967

Studio Album

Chelsea Girl

Nico · 1967

Studio Album

The Composer Of Desafinado, Plays

Antonio Carlos Jobim · 1963

Studio Album

Lady Sings The Blues

Billie Holiday · 1956

Studio Album

The Cat

The Incredible Jimmy Smith · 1964

Studio Album

Never Can Say Goodbye

Gloria Gaynor · 1975

Studio Album

Bongo Rock

Michael Viner's Incredible Bongo Band · 1973

Studio Album

Jazz Samba Encore!

Stan Getz, Luiz Bonfá · 1963

Studio Album

Kill Bill Vol. 2 (Original Soundtrack)

Various · 2004

Studio Album

Winds Of Change

Eric Burdon & The Animals · 1967

Studio Album

Gone With The Wind

Max Steiner · 1967

Studio Album

Bing & Satchmo

Bing Crosby And Louis Armstrong · 1960

Studio Album

Sister Rosetta Tharpe

Sister Rosetta Tharpe · 1960

Studio Album

Stan Getz With Guest Artist Laurindo Almeida

Stan Getz With Laurindo Almeida · 1963

Studio Album

Eric Burdon Declares "War"

Eric Burdon & War · 1970

Studio Album

Caravan

Caravan · 1969

Studio Album

Jimmy & Wes - The Dynamic Duo

Jimmy Smith & Wes Montgomery · 1967

Studio Album

Bashin' - The Unpredictable Jimmy Smith

Jimmy Smith · 1962

Studio Album

The Twain Shall Meet

Eric Burdon & The Animals · 1968

Studio Album

Ultimate Spinach

Ultimate Spinach · 1968

Studio Album

Connie's Christmas

Connie Francis · 1959

Studio Album

The Fabulous Shirley Bassey

Shirley Bassey · 1959

Studio Album

Music For Zen Meditation And Other Joys

Tony Scott · 1965

Studio Album

Sammy Davis Jr. & Count Basie

Sammy Davis Jr. & Count Basie · 1965

Studio Album

The Shadow Of Your Smile

Astrud Gilberto · 1965

Studio Album

I'm Leaving It (All) Up To You

Donny And Marie Osmond · 1974

Studio Album

Ben Webster Meets Oscar Peterson

Ben Webster Meets Oscar Peterson · 1959

Studio Album

Los Grandes Exitos De Connie Francis

Connie Francis · 1960

Studio Album

The Black-Man's Burdon

Eric Burdon And War · 1970

Studio Album

Ritchie Valens

Ritchie Valens · 1959

Studio Album

Brazilian Mood

Walter Wanderley · 1966

Studio Album

Last Tango In Paris

Gato Barbieri · 1972

Studio Album

Bossa Na Praia

Astrud Gilberto · 1967

Studio Album

Lightnin' Strikes

Lou Christie · 1965

Studio Album

Hope You Like It

Geordie · 1973

Studio Album

There's A Kind Of Hush All Over The World

Herman's Hermits · 1967

Studio Album

Got My Mojo Workin'

The Incredible Jimmy Smith · 1966

Studio Album

Experience Gloria Gaynor

Gloria Gaynor · 1975

Studio Album