Bell Records

Profile:

Also appears as "Bell" only or "Bell Record". For unofficial releases, see Bell Records (3).
In 1952 Arthur Shimkin bought the Bell label from 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 Sick magazine (an early losing competitor to Mad 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.

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 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 Bell Records Pty. Limited in Australia.
Distributed by Philip Warren Ltd. in New Zealand.
Distributed by Discos Belter, S.A. after 1962 company restructuring)

Parent Label:

Arista

Sublabels:

Mala, ...

Info:

US:
Bell Records, a division of Columbia Pictures Industries Inc.
1776 Broadway
New York, NY 10019

UK:
Columbia Pictures Industries Inc.
Bell Records Division
30 Harcourt St.
London W1H 2BE

Manufacturer

Bell Records Arista Sony Music Entertainment 25 Madison Ave New York, NY 10010 USA https://www.aristarecordings.com/

Manufacturer EU

Sony Music Entertainment GmbH Bülowstr. 80 10783 Berlin https://discogs.cinepelis.org/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection" class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="7c171312081d17083c0f13120511090f151f521f1311">[email protected]

Links:

bellrecords.nl , Wikipedia , bsnpubs.com

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Reviews

  • HuggyMan66's avatar
    HuggyMan66
    From 1952 until 1975, Bell Records had quite a definitive roster of artists, ranging from The Drifters to Sergio Mendes to Crazy Elephant to The Partridge Family to Tony Orlando & Dawn to The Bay City Rollers. Other acts who've recorded for Bell also include The Fifth Dimension, The Stampeders, Vicki Lawrence & Barry Manilow. Bell's two most distinct labels are the purple & silver label used prior to 1969, with the word "BELL" spelled in the shape of a bell. The label used from 1969 until 1975 consisted of a silver label with black print, featuring a bell with the word "bell" spelled in lower-case letters. At the right of the icons was an arc consisting of five curved lines, which were displayed at the top of the label. Radio stations played promo copies of Bell singles, which consisted of a white label with red print, same style as the silver & black label. The white labels contained the words: "PROMOTIONAL COPY NOT FOR SALE". In 1975, the Bell label was discontinued & became Arista Records. Since that time, the Bell name & logo have been revived. In 1993, wrestler Hulk Hogan featuring Green Jelly recorded a single on Bell titled "I'm The Leader Of The Gang (I Am)". Bell Records will always be fondly ed by me for its fine lineup of musical acts & their assortment of catchy & memorable songs. Bravo, Bell Records!