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The London American Label Year By Year 1960 Various Artists (London American)
The London American Label
Year By Year 1960
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ACE
CD CATALOGUE NUMBER
CDCHD 1237
LABEL
ACE
DISC01
01LET IT ROCK
Chuck Berrymp3 available
02THREE STEPS TO HEAVEN
Eddie Cochran
03WISHFUL THINKING
Wynn Stewart
04KOMMOTION
Duane Eddy
05BLUE ANGEL
Roy Orbison
06MYSTERY TRAIN
Vernon Taylor
07TINY TIM
LaVern Baker
08POETRY IN MOTION
Johnny Tillotson
09I LOVE THE WAY YOU LOVE
Marv Johnson
10ROAD RUNNER
Bo Diddley
11BEATNIK FLY
Johnny & The Hurricanes
12ALL I COULD DO WAS CRY
Etta James
13TOO YOUNG TO DATE
The Delicates
14DON'T BE CRUEL
Bill Black's Combomp3 available
15WAKE ME, SHAKE ME
The Coasters
16JUDY
Teddy Redell
17SAVE THE LAST DANCE FOR ME
The Drifters
18HEY LITTLE ONE
Dorsey Burnette
19LOVEY
The Clovers
20SOMEBODY TO LOVE
Bobby Darinmp3 available
21I'VE BEEN LOVED BEFORE
Shirley & Lee
22DOLL HOUSE
Donnie Brooks
23PERFIDIA
The Ventures
24LIKE STRANGERS
The Everly Brothers
25MY GIRL JOSEPHINE
Fats Domino
26THE GIRL ON DEATH ROW
Lee Hazlewood with Duane Eddy & His Orchestra
27SADIE'S BACK IN TOWN
Sonny Burgess
28YOU'RE SIXTEEN
Johnny Burnette
 Various Artists (London American)
courtesy Ace Records Ltd
 

EMI didn’t have one until 1962, Philips never had one at all, Pye tried hard, but remained in division two for much of its life and the Rank Organisation had one that rang up such huge losses they pretty much gave theirs away. The label none of those companies could match was housed on the Albert Embankment, the home of the Decca Record Company – the label was London American and it, unlike Top Rank, Pye International and Stateside was the label you turned to most often when looking for the best in American pop, R&B and rock’n’roll.

America was the first country in which a London label appeared. It was the flagship of British Decca’s American operations as far back as 1934. In Britain, the London logo made its debut in 1949 releasing material culled from its American namesake, but also from early US independents like Audivox, Jubilee, Derby, Cadence, Imperial, Essex and Jubilee.

In 1954, a new prefix (HL) and numbering system (8001) was introduced and it’s this series that gave the London American label its legendary status. As rock’n’roll took hold in America new labels sprung up by the bucket load and Decca’s reputation for honest, straight forward dealing meant the new label entrepreneurs could trust Decca to pay its advances and deliver regular royalty statements and payments so the stature of the London American label grew rapidly.

EMI’s Columbia, Parlophone and HMV labels had some US hits, others turned up on smaller British labels like Melodisc, Oriole and Starlite, but the cream was always to be found on the silver and black London label. Here you’d find material from Atlantic, Liberty (whose ability to survive and expand was partly made possible by a financial leap of faith by Sir Edward Lewis, the chairman of Decca who, when asked for a hundred thousand dollars advance for the rights to the Liberty catalogue in the mid-50s offered fifty thousand more, such was his belief in Liberty’s founder Si Waronker), Cadence, Dot, Jamie, Sun, Chess, Specialty, Warwick, Imperial and United Artists, most of which became major players whilst others like Greenwich, Sunbeam, Paris, Dore, Arwin, Judd, JDS and countless others turned out to be little more than ‘here today, gone tomorrow’ operations. Still, their recordings all found a home on London American.

And so now Ace Records begins a year-by-year series celebrating the hits, misses and downright rarities that found a British outlet on the London American label, starting with 1960.

Here you’ll find familiar recordings by Chuck Berry, Johnny Tillotson, Duane Eddy, Eddie Cochran, the Ventures, the Coasters and Johnny Burnette, but look more closely and you’ll find lesser-known records from the Delicates, whose members we now know more about than ever we knew in 1960, Teddy Redell with a track that’ll set you back £50 or £60 pounds now and Sonny Burgess, a wild rock‘n’roller who hadn’t noticed America’s chart was full of boy next door love songs in 1960. Here too, you’ll find Vernon Taylor’s sought-after version of Elvis’s ‘Mystery Train’, and even a good-time country sound from Wynn Stewart which London chose to only manufacture in Britain as an export item.

But don’t let me keep you, grab your copy of The London American Label Year By Year and start re-living the sound of 1960. Then keep your eyes peeled for 1961, 1962, 1963.

By Austin Powell

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