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General Statements on Capitol/EMI:
•Capitol Records: Capitol was a wholly owned subsidiary
of EMI and given independence on the acquisitions it made, or in
the Beatles case for a while, did not make. Brian then convinced
the company to put $40,000 into promotions for the group. This included
a million copies of a four-page insert about the band, free copies
of their single to DJ's, and five million posters saying 'The Beatles
Are Coming' (Mackenzie).
•George Martin admitted that EMI had nothing to lose by
signing the Beatles.
Capitol Records' Decisions/Terms:
•Capitol Records chooses to release "I Want to Hold
Your Hand". They invest in publicity and print up 5,000,000
"The Beatles Are Coming" badges.
•An album of 12 songs would count as 6 singles. There would
be an increase of 1/4p the first year and 1/2p after 2 years (Coleman).
•There was no advance given to the Beatles. They were to
receive 1p domestic sales per disk and 1/2p on foreign sales.
•A Brief History on EMI Courtesy of Scripophily.com "Wall
Street History Lost and Found"
Source: Ottawa Beatle Site: One of BEATLE mONEY's top-rated websites.
In 1897 the Gramophone Company began trading in London, intending
to establish a European market for the gramophone and its flat disc
records which Emile Berliner had invented and patented in the USA
some ten years earlier. Initially the Company's catalogue consisted
mainly of songs by music hall artists, brass band recordings and
other popular material, but in 1902 a rising young opera star, Enrico
Caruso, recorded ten arias in a hotel room in Milan, and thereby
helped to establish the gramophone as a serious medium for classical
music. The Gramophone Company flourished, selling both classical
and popular recordings throughout the whole of Europe as well as
Australia, India and other parts of the old British Empire.
•Meanwhile, the Columbia Graphophone Company was also establishing
itself in Europe, initially selling the cylinder records and phonographs
invented by Thomas Edison, but quickly switching to flat discs.
Columbia was soon the main competitor of the Gramophone Company,
which had become known as HMV because of its use of the "His
Master's Voice" painting as its main trademark. By 1929 record
sales were booming as never before, with dance band recordings selling
literally millions of copies, but then the Great Depression hit,
and sales slumped dramatically. To avoid bankruptcy, the Gramophone
Company and its arch-rival the Columbia Graphophone Company merged
in April 1931 to form Electric and Musical Industries (EMI).
•In November 1931 EMI opened the world's first purpose-built
recording studio complex in North London at 3 Abbey Road, which
remains to this day the centre of EMI's recording and post-production
work. Throughout the 1930s the record business gradually picked
up, with classical artists like violinist Yehudi Menuhin and tenor
Beniamino Gigli giving significant support to EMI's recovery. After
a further major setback caused by the Second World War, the Company
revived its classical catalogue with major new stars like Herbert
von Karajan and Maria Callas, and hired a number of talented producers,
including George Martin, to strengthen the pop recording programme.
•The 1950s saw the arrival of rock 'n' roll and the beginning
of the pop culture that resulted in a massive sales explosion, aided
by the arrival of the 45 rpm single and the 33 1/3 rpm long-playing
record. In 1955, to replace the loss of its long-established licensing
arrangements with RCA-Victor and CBS, EMI entered the important
American market by acquiring Capitol Records, whose artists included
Frank Sinatra, Nat "King" Cole and, later, The Beach Boys.
EMI was in the forefront of the development of the British pop scene
that reached its initial peak with The Beatles in the early 1960s,
and subsequently produced many successful groups such as Pink Floyd,
Queen, Deep Purple and Iron Maiden.
•In recent years EMI has further strengthened its position
in the world record market by acquiring a number of other important
record companies, including Chrysalis and Virgin, as well as developing
its own roster of outstanding acts. Today EMI is unrivaled both
for the richness of its past heritage and for the strength of its
current catalogue featuring many of the world's most successful
pop and classical artists.
Vee Jay/Swan Record Comp.:
•Vee Jay Records offered $20,000 per record paid in intervals.
The record initially sold in low numbers (Coleman).
•Swan was chosen to release "She Loves You". The
record initially sold in low numbers.
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