The Rise and Fall of Paramount Records : : a Great Migration Story, 1917-1932
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Call Number: 338.761 Bl
On Shelf At: Downtown Library
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Preface -- Introduction : out of the anonymous dark -- The great migration -- The Black metropolis -- A brief history of the phonograph -- Who by fire : the rise of Paramount -- Holy fools of the record business -- A brief history of Black minstrelsy -- Rise of the blues women -- Mayo Williams : impresario, confidence man, champion of the race -- How to make a race record -- Electrically recorded -- Rise of the jazz masters -- Dying lights of vaudeville : Papa Charlie Jackson and Ma Rainey -- Blind Lemon Jefferson -- Blind Blake -- Ghost voices -- Last kind words -- Frolic -- The discoverers -- The time of the preacher : rise of sacred voices -- Ghost in the machine : Clarence Williams and the rise of swing -- Grafton sessions : ridiculous to the sublime -- Feeding them on babe's milk : Skip James and the other -- River of earth : old-time music -- The sense of an ending.
"Founded in 1917, Paramount Records was but one of the home-grown record labels of the New York Recording Laboratories (NYRL), a subsidiary of a chair company in Wisconsin with operations near Lake Michigan. No outsized hopes were pinned to Paramount or its sister companies; its founders knew nothing of the music business, the records themselves were only to drive sales of expensive phonograph cabinets they had recently begun manufacturing. Lacking both the resources and the interest to compete for top talent, Paramount's earliest recordings were gained little foothold with the listening public. By 1922, on the threshold of bankruptcy, Paramount embarked on a new business plan that had recently proven successful for other record companies: selling the music of Black artists to Black audiences. Advertising in newspapers dedicated to Black readership and utilizing other strategies such as local talent scouts and sales agents in the South, unconventional distribution channels, an "open door" recording policy, direct mail order and the eventual hiring of the first Black record executive in a white-owned record company, Paramount expanded its footprint and eventually garnered many of the biggest selling titles in the "race records" era. By the time it ceased operations in 1932, NYRL had pressed and shipped hundreds of thousands of records, including more than 2,300 recordings of blues, gospel and jazz in its Paramount "race" series alone, with a slate of performers including the likes of Louis Armstrong, Charley Patton, Ethel Waters, Son House, Fletcher Henderson, Skip James, Alberta Hunter, Blind Blake, King Oliver, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Ma Rainey, Johnny Dodds, Papa Charlie Jackson, and Jelly Roll Morton. In short, Paramount accidentally accomplished what others could not. On the one hand, Scott Blackwood's The Rise and Fall of Paramount is the story of happenstance. But it is also a tale about the sheer force of the Great Migration and the legacy of the music put down into the shellacked grooves of a 78 record: Black America finding its voice. It is the story the legacy of the Great Migration and how blues, jazz, and folk music transcended boundaries, and how this almost never happened. Blackwood brings to life these many moments-through creative nonfiction-and makes present and full-blooded what hadn't been brought to life before"-- Provided by publisher.
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PUBLISHED
Baton Rouge : Louisiana State University Press, [2023]
Year Published: 2023
Description: x, 199 pages : illustrations (black and white) ; 24 cm
Language: English
Format: Book
ISBN/STANDARD NUMBER
9780807179147
0807179140
SUBJECTS
Paramount (Sound recording label)
New York Recording Laboratories.
Wisconsin Chair Company.
Sound recording industry -- Wisconsin -- History -- 20th century.
African American sound recording executives and producers -- Wisconsin -- History -- 20th century.
African American musicians -- Wisconsin -- History -- 20th century.
African American singers -- Wisconsin -- History -- 20th century.