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Brunswick Records is a United States based record label.
In January of 1920 a new line of Brunswick Records were introduced using the lateral cut system that was then becoming the default cut for 78 disc records. The parent company marketed them extensively, and within a few years Brunswick became one of the USA's Big Three record companies, along with Victor and Columbia Records. The Brunswick line of home phonographs were also commercially successful.
In late 1924 Brunswick acquired the Vocalion Records label. Around 1925 Brunswick introduced its own version of electrical recording called the "Light Ray Process" using photo electrical cells, although it switched to the more conventional microphone process a few years later. Around the same time they introduced the Brunswick Panatrope, the first home phonograph that reproduced records electrically. This met with critical acclaim, and composer Ottorino Respighi selected the Brunswick Panatrope to play a recording of bird song in his composition "The Pines of Rome". In April of 1930 Brunswick Balke Collender sold Brunswick Records to Warner Brothers, who hoped to make their own soundrack recordings for their sound-on-disc Vitaphone system. During this period they signed Bing Crosby, who was to become their biggest recording star. When Vitaphone was abandoned in favor of the sound-on-film system--and record industry sales plummetted due to the depression--Warners leased Brunswick to the American Record Corporation in December of 1931.In 1932 the British branch of Brunswick was acquired by Decca Records. In 1939 the American Record Corp. was
bought by the Columbia Broadcasting System for $750,000, which
discontinued the label in 1940. This violated the Warners lease
agreement, resulting in the Brunswick trademark being transferred
to American Decca (Which WB had a financial interest), along
with all masters recorded up to December, 1931. Rights to recordings
from late-Dec. 1931 on were retained by CBS/Columbia.) |