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Capitol Records is a major United States-based
record label, now part of the EMI Music
Group. The company was founded by the songwriter Johnny Mercer in
1942.
Capital Record by Wingy Manone
History
Mercer founded Capitol Records with the financial help of movie producer Buddy DeSylva and the business acumen of Glenn Wallichs, owner of Music City, at the
time the biggest record store in Los Angeles,
California. Capitol was the first West Coast label, competing with RCA-Victor, Columbia and Decca
in New York. In addition to its Los Angeles recording studio Capitol had a second studio in New
York City, and on occasion sent mobile recording equipment to New Orleans, Louisiana and other cities.
The earliest recording artists included Paul Whiteman, Martha Tilton, and Ella Mae Morse. Capitol's first gold single was Moorse's "Cow Cow Boogie" in
1942. By 1946 Capitol had sold 42 million records and was established as one of the Big Six studios. In 1950 Capitol built its
own studio on Melrose Avenue in Hollywood.
By the mid-1950s Capitol had become a huge company, concentrating on popular music.
Its roster included Nat King Cole, Stan Kenton, Wingy
Manone Peggy Lee, Dean
Martin, Frank Sinatra, Judy Garland, Keely Smith, and Nelson Riddle. It started a subsidiary label "Angel Records" for classical music; most of the recordings were recorded in Europe and pressed from masters leased from European labels.
In 1955, the English record company EMI acquired
Capitol Records for $8.5 million. Soon afterward, EMI built a new studio in Hollywood to match its state-of-the-art Abbey Road Studios in London.
The Capitol Tower
The Capitol Records building is one of the most distinctive landmarks in Hollywood, California. The 13-storey earthquake-resistant tower, designed by Welton Becket, was the world's first circular office building. The wide curved awnings over windows on
each storey and the tall spike emerging from the top of the building combine to give it the appearance of a stack of vinyl 45s on a turntable. The rectangular ground floor is a separate structure, joined to the tower after it was completed. It
was built in 1956 just north of the intersection of Hollywood and Vine.
The blinking light atop the tower spells out the word "Hollywood" in morse code. In 1992 it was changed to read "Capitol 50"
in honor of the label's 50th anniversary. It has since returned to spelling "Hollywood."
Capitol/EMI
The merger of Capitol Records and EMI created a large conglomeration, which owns the rights to The Beatles, the Beach Boys, Pink Floyd, Bob Seger, Duran Duran, Bonnie Raitt, Robbie Robertson, Steve
Miller, Tina Turner, the Beastie Boys, and Garth Brooks.
In 2001, EMI merged Capitol Records label with the Priority Records label. The combined label manages artists including Paul McCartney, Ice Cube, Snoop Dogg, and C-Murder.
See also:
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