London Records

Sub-label of Universal Music Operations Ltd.

20 sub-labels
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About

British owned multi-national label created by The Decca Record Company Limited initially to market their catalogue in North America and their North American catalogue outside North America, but later to market licensed catalogue around the world, both directly (in the UK) and via their worldwide licensees. It had a third life as a worldwide label under Decca’s new owners Polygram from the 1980s. Also appears as: [b]London[/b] only or [b]London Recordings[/b]. Label Code: LC 0253 / LC 00253 (LC 7654 / LC 07654 for London/[l297] releases). Please note: INT is not part of the catalogue number, it merely indicates that number is the international number. For all unofficial / bootleg copies of this label please use [l263627]. London Records was established in 1947 from the split in ownership between the British branch of Decca and that same company's USA branch. Since British Decca could not use the Decca name in North America, it used the "London" label and logo to release records from the UK owned Decca catalogue for US release only. Note: Many USA releases from 1950 to the mid 1970's say "Made in England" on the bottom edge of label; these were pressed at Decca's second factory in Hampshire, close to Southampton Docks in southern England (the primary factory was at New Malden in Surrey, about 9 miles south of central London) (see also: [l269986]). These USA issues have an inverted matrix (master) release # above the USA release # that corresponds to the original "Decca" tapes. British pressings were also shipped to Canada, where London Records of Canada, Ltd. had been established in 1948. The label was subsequently established in England in late 1949 for releases from London's US roster, starting numerically with catalogue number L 500, "Jealous Heart" by Al Morgan. These early releases had catalogue numbers that were numerically the same as the corresponding US releases, but with the L prefix added. There were gaps in this numerical sequence corresponding to British recordings that were released on Decca in Britain. Eventually the US roster was wound down and the US label became primarily an outlet for Decca's British and European recordings (though the Canadian branch maintained a significant domestic roster). In Britain from late 1951, the label became an outlet for recordings licensed from US independent labels via London's New York office, leading to the introduction of the HL series of singles in early 1954, and eventually the famous and collectable "American Recordings" sub-branding (or "American Series" on LPs). London Canada adopted a similar role, but without any sub-branding. This branding [i]might[/i] incorporate additional logos for [b]ffrr[/b], [b]Full Frequency Range Recording[/b] (not [i]Recordings[/i]), [b]American Recordings[/b] or [b]British Recordings[/b], which are currently not acknowledged as distinct labels in the database except for London American Recordings. FFRR is only for the Full Frequency Range Recordings (not [i]Recording[/i]) dance music imprint established in the mid-1980s; see its label profile for details. In the UK, the London label focused on pop music under the aegis of Roger Ames, while the Decca Record Company Limited operated as a separate company, with its US releases rebranded with the London name. Decca was eventually acquired by PolyGram in 1980. [b]Please note that[/b] Decca released several classical series in Europe under the London Records label, for example [l680774], [l1801606], and an unnamed series of reissues of works composed and conducted by [a598601]. In 1999, the MCA and PolyGram families merged to form Universal Music Group, and in 2000, Roger Ames was hired to run Warner Music. The Decca name could be used worldwide by Universal after the merger. Ames was awarded London as part of a severance package and took it to WEA worldwide. In the US, the imprint was merged with Sire Records Group to form London-Sire Records, which existed until 2003. In the UK, The company was renamed London Records 90 Ltd. to distinguish it from the Decca Label Group. Ames later sold the London Records 90 Ltd to Warner Music. In 2010, Universal Music reclaimed ownership of the London Records trade mark. On July 1, 2011 Universal Music reclaimed the London Records name and relaunched it under the executive team of Nick Raphael (President) and later Jo Charrington (Senior Vice President of A&R) who together previously ran Epic Records for Sony Music Entertainment since 2001. Both had started their careers at London Records in the Ames era in the 1990s. The team would later rebrand itself as Capitol Records Ltd. following UMG's buyout of EMI. [b]Misleading boilerplate information[/b]. Beware of spiel on a large number of releases which states "Marketed in France by Barclay & in Germany by Metronome Musik GmbH/Motor Music Gmbh" as this is very often applied arbitrarily with no consideration for the genuine country of release. For example, releases earmarked for exclusive release in specific countries such as UK, Germany or Croatia often include this text. Where this text is displayed it should be used as a guide only when attributing a release to a given country. [b]Rights societies[/b] In the mid 1980's London's parent at the time Polygram signed a central licensing agreement (CLA) in Europe with the Dutch rights society Stemra. In the summer of 1996 an new CLA was signed this time with MCPS. As such, the appearance of these rights societies on European releases should not be used to determine the country of release.

Sub-labels

The Rolling Stones - "UK Flag" - ¥2000

The Rolling Stones - "UK Flag" - style OBI came into use in 1981 to promote the japanese series of reissues.

The Rolling Stones - "USA Flag" - ¥2000

The Rolling Stones - "USA Flag" - style OBI came into use in 1982 to promote the japanese series of reissues

ロンドン・ステレオ名盤 1300

Japanese first pressings limited and low price classical series on London Records issued by King Records Co., Ltd. in mid 1970, priced at ¥1,300 each.

The Greatest Hits Of All

Series of classical music by London Records

London Stereo Treasury Series

Budget series of classical stereo recordings from [l1060] label introduced January 1967 to September 1983 (see Billboard December 31, 1966) . Specific to releases on vinyl and cassette in US & Ca...

London Jubilee Series

Special [l1060] reissue series marking Queen Elizabeth II's Silver Jubilee celebration in 1978. See also, [l222235] for the Decca version of this series.

American Hit-Parade

EP series by [l=London Records]

Music for Relaxation (5)

A series under the Parent Label [l1060].

Very Best Classic Cassettes

Relase dates: 1978-10-20 cassettes from AF-8001 to AF-8020 1978-11-10 cassettes from AF-8021 to AF-8040 1978-12-10 cassettes from AF-8041 to AF-8060

Home Concert

London Collectors Edition

After the initial eight releases in the [l441824], the series name was changed to London Collectors Edition.

The Rolling Stones: 20 Golden Oldies

Brazilian series, released on the London Records label. Reissues of Rolling Stones 45s.

Echoes (9)

Brazilian LP series from the early 1980s

Mantovani Original 1300 Series

London Mood Music Original 1300 Series

Or ロンドン・ムード・ミュージック オリジナル1300シリーズ

Essential Recordings

Defunct label founded by that ran from 1998 to 2000.

Systematic

Established by . Sub-label of London Records concentrating on dance releases.

Street Beat

UK Early 80s Electro/ Disco label associated with London Records. Label created for [a193707].

Forbidden Fruit

UK Sub-label of London Records, responsible for many of the 'Bronski Beat' releases.

London

Distributor/record company/copyright holder. [b]Do not use as record label.[/b] Use [l=London Records] as a label instead.

Contact

UK office: London Records Ltd. PO Box 2LB London W1A 2LB United Kingdom Canadian office: London Records of Canada 6265 Côte de Liesse St Laurent, PQ H4T 103 Canada