About
Also appears as "Bell" only or "Bell Record". For unofficial releases, see Bell Records (3). In 1952 Arthur Shimkin bought the Bell label from Benny Bell and became President of the company. Head of A&R was Morty Palitz. The musical director was Sy Oliver. In its early stages, Bell recorded popular music and comedy. By 1959, Al Massler was President of Bell. Massler formed Mala Records in 1959 as a subsidiary label to Bell, Mala recorded popular, rock and roll and R&B music. Massler also formed another subsidiary, Amy Records, in 1960. Amy recorded popular, rock and roll, ethnic, comedy and R&B. The original Bell records of the '50s generally tended toward cover versions of popular hits of the times, much as the Tops Records label did, or "generic" non-hit pop. After Massler became president, they concentrated more on albums, much like budget pop labels such as Strand. The orchestral backup was first-rate on many of these, with bands such as Sy Oliver and Burt Bacharach appearing. But generic pop music was dying out as the '50s closed, and by the turn of the decade, some changes needed to be made if the label was to survive. By 1959, the Bell label itself was almost inactive on the singles side, perhaps partly due to the aforementioned "image" problems. Instead of fighting Bell's established reputation when entering the rock and roll 45 marketplace, Massler shifted primarily to Mala and (later) Amy for singles, and used Bell as an album label. When one of the Amy singles ("The Madison" by Al Brown's Tunetoppers, Amy 804) unexpectedly hit, an album called Madison Dance Party [Amy A-1] was quickly issued. Actually, "The Madison," which made #23 on the Billboard charts nationally, would have been a bigger hit had not Columbia put out a competing song, "Madison Time" by the Ray Bryant Combo, which split sales (the latter made #30). A second Amy album [A-2], was a tie-in with [i]Sick[/i] magazine (an early losing competitor to [i]Mad[/i] Magazine). By 1961, the Bell label itself was moribund, with a few albums and no singles being issued. The main activity was with Mala and Amy, each of which continued with about two dozen 45 issues per year, essentially without album issues. The Amy and Mala singles catalog was interesting, with most issues being well-produced stiffs, with an occasional chart single. Larry Uttal, who was the owner of Madison Records, folded his Madison label and shifted his artists to Amy and Mala near the end of 1961. He purchased Bell/Mala/Amy outright some time between late 1961 and early 1964. In 1955 the Dutch company ROVA closed an agreement with Bell Records to become their exclusive Dutch distributor. The records were imported directly from the United States and were sold for HFL.1,95, a price much lower than the prices of other records at that time. This explains the fact that so many Bell Records circulate in The Netherlands! In December 1958 ROVA started releasing their own productions on the Golden Bell label. Dutch songs recorded by Dutch artists like Kobus Robijn, Adri Tuinsma and Jenny Roda. ROVA continued to sell Bell Records on the Dutch market until the end of the 1950s, after which the company disappeared from the Dutch record market. Responsible for most of the releases by Gary Glitter and the Glitter Band, Slik, Showaddywaddy, The Sweet etc. during the Glam 70s; other artists included the Partridge Family, David Cassidy, Solomon Burke, Terry Jacks, Barry Manilow, Suzi Quatro, The O'Jays (prior to their Philly Soul superstardom) Tony Orlando and Dawn, Melissa Manchester and The Fifth Dimension. In 1974, it changed its name to Arista and everything that was then currently on Bell was eventually reissued with the new name (though certain artists' material was still issued on the Bell label until the early 1980s in Britain). In Europe, Arista/BMG released several titles with the Bell name in the 1990s. Distributed by Festival Records & Bell Records Pty. Limited in Australia. Distributed by Philip Warren Ltd. in New Zealand. Distributed by [l437194] in Spain in mid 1950s (and probably by [l297233] after 1962 company restructuring)
Sub-labels
Bell
Used for company credits which specifically credit "Bell". For the label, use [b][l=Bell Records][/b]
Neighborhood Records (2)
When New York-born folk singer fell out with Buddah Records in 1971, she started up her own label, Neighborhood Records, with her manager husband , and immediatel...
Windfall Records
Windfall Records was a record label founded in 1969, and was first distributed by [l25407]. Later from 1972 until 1974 it was distributed by [l1866] Records. The most successful act for Windfall w...
Hot Line Music Journal Records
American soul label from Grand Rapids, Michigan that was founded by [a2748299] and [a451431] in 1967;distributed nationally by [l25407]. Known for releasing [a25261]'s early singles. See also [l35...
Mala
US subsidiary of [l=Bell Records] founded in 1959 by Al Massler. Some logos are shown as: "Mala Records". For bootlegs and unofficial releases, see [l=Mala (2)].
Philly Soulville Records
1970s soul label from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. A division of Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc.
Amy
Also appears as "Amy Records". For all unofficial/bootleg releases, see [l678678]. [l=Bell Records] sublabel started in 1960. Like the motherlabel "Amy" led an indestinctive line, releasing a var...
Ding Dong
After the UK's Top 20 success of Kym Mazelle & Jocelyn Brown's "No More Tears (Enough Is Enough)", Mike Stock & Matt Aitken -who produced the track- signed a deal with Arista Records UK in 1994 to ...
Hi-Life Records (2)
A [l=Bell Records] budget line subsidiary, active early-to-mid 1960s. Many releases are reissues of titles originally issued on Bell. Shared the same 1650 Broadway address as Bell, and [a=Al Massle...
Aurora (8)
USA record Label. For Bootlegs/ Unofficial releases please use [l496496].
Logo (3)
1960s soul label from New York City, owned by [a253419]. Sister label to [l704370], both formed in 1961 after a deal with [a2866708].
Bell Gold
Short lived reissue series circa 1972. Likely reissued hit singles from the [l=soul city (2)] label after it was purchased by Bell.
High Camp Adventure
A series of adventure records released by Bell Records.
Togo
1960s soul label from New York City, owned by [a253419]. Sister label to [l479117], both formed in 1961 after a deal with [a2866708].
Philly Groove Records Incorporated
U.S. soul music label started by [a128025] and Sam Bell in 1967, with noted producer doing A&R. Sometimes shown as simply "Philly Groove Records" or "Philly Groove Records & Tapes". ...
Special Blues Series
You Must Remember These
Contact
[b]US:[/b] Bell Records, a division of Columbia Pictures Industries Inc. 1776 Broadway New York, NY 10019 [b]UK:[/b] Columbia Pictures Industries Inc. Bell Records Division 30 Harcourt St. London W1H 2BE