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The Latest News About Fantasy ...


garthsj

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Here is a recent article from Variety ... I am not sure whether to get out my Visa card for the misssing OJCs in my collection ....

Concord's Vineyard Overflowing

Label follows Grammy wins with jazz, adult pop staples

by Phil Gallo

Variety, March 21, 2005

Following the phenomenal success of Ray Charles' final recording,

Concord Records is getting back to business as usual.

Label resumes its role as a jazz and adult pop house, working a slate

of 23 new albums that will be released between now and the end of

August. It includes an intriguing confluence of female singers --

Mary Haskell, Keely Smith and Debby Boone -- with new albums hitting

retail within the next five weeks.

"The first thing we look for is quality plus a reason to do

something," says Gene Rumsey, general manager of Concord. "The

consistent thing across all three records is the quality of the

recording."

For the Smith record, titled "Vegas '58 Today" and filled with the

repertoire she and Louis Prima performed in Las Vegas, Concord has "a

story that should be retold and one that coincides with the 100th

birthday of Las Vegas."

As for Boone, Rumsey noted: "It's ironic that Rosie's daughter-in-law

comes to us right about the same age as when Rosie came to us. After

hearing the music, we had a great reason to do this." Boone will be

part of the Rosemary Clooney remembrance June 20 at Carnegie Hall.

Haskell, a former Miss Mississippi who gave up her showbiz career

after she married former William Morris exec Sam Haskell and started

a family, is going a unique route: recording well-known songs that

work on a spiritual as well as musical level.

Titled "Inspired: Standards Good for the Soul," Haskell's disc

attempts to cross between the jazz world and the contempo Christian

market. Discovered singing with Concord associate Michael Feinstein,

she opened a show for Sandi Patty, made TV appearances and will play

Feinstein's in New York as well as opening for Tony Danza on March

28.

Haskell hopes to be booked into larger church venues, where she will

sing standards such as "You'll Never Walk Alone" along with songs

from the tuners "Wicked" and "Under the Bridge" plus a number by

Dolly Parton. As she puts it: "timeless melodies with a timely

message."

"One young guy in our international division came into my office and

asked me, 'How do I make the world a better place?'" Rumsey relates,

noting he was taken aback by the question. "As you listen to the

music, you hear a desire on her part to make a difference, to help

people get through difficult periods.

"It presents a bit of a challenge because it's tough to market to

inspirational radio and Christian bookstores. But there is a message,

and we have to show how it fits nicely in the cracks."

After the releases from the femme warblers hit retail, Concord --

which switched distribution to Universal from Ryko this month -- will

issue new recordings from jazzsters Gary Burton and Scott Hamilton,

Eric Clapton's drummer Jamie Oldaker and singers Dianne Schuur,

Curtis Stigers and Nnenna Freelon.

Subsid labels Peak, Stretch and Picante will issue discs by Dave

Weckl, Eddie Palmieri, David Benoit, "American Idol" finalist LaToya

London, the Rippingtons and Poncho Sanchez. Also on tap are archival

releases by Bobby Darin, Marian McPartland and Tony Bennett.

That gets the label through August, by which time it is expected to

have a plan in place for Fantasy Records, which the label acquired

late last year for some $80 million.

Fantasy, which includes Stax, Milestone, Prestige, Pablo and other

imprints, is one of the largest jazz catalogs in the U.S., also

boasts many of the finest soul sides to come out of Memphis in the

1960s and all of Creedence Clearwater Revival's albums.

(An olive branch has been extended to CCR's John Fogerty, who had a

contentious and litigious relationship with Fantasy and owner Saul

Zaentz for three decades).

Fantasy is based in Berkeley, Calif., where it has kept a low profile

releasing thousands of older albums on CD while new recordings from

the likes of Sonny Rollins and Jimmy Scott are kept to a minimum.

Rumsey says no decision has been made on whether the label should

remain based in Northern California or if the operations should be

combined.

"Fantasy execs know the restrictions and they've run a really good

business," Rumsey observes. "There's no reason to radically change

that. We have to do it in a measured way."

One part of the puzzle in the success of Ray Charles' "Genius Loves

Company" was the involvement of Starbucks and its label Hear Music.

Rumsey and Concord execs are finding more willing partners, among

them FTD and Hallmark, but the two worlds are operating on different

time schedules.

"It's better to take your product to where the consumer is, but we're

dealing with people whose planning is well into 2006. And we're

asking, 'How about Mother's Day?'"

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imagine if some zealous Euro swiped their catalog, year by year, & then added their own research, photos, etc w/effort made to properly compensate the artists also? it COULD be done.

Yeah, it could be.

And if I had a 14" dick and $20 million, I could fuck Jennifer Lopez. :g:g:g:g:g

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No punishment is strong enough, for anyone who uses the term "jazzsters" in print. <_<

I have a friend and colleague who writes film reviews for Variety on a regular basis ... we get to see a lot of free movies (mostly the crummy ones); directly afterwards we retire to a local "eatery" and over a couple of glasses of wine we compose these reviews in "Varietyese" ... lotsa fun doing that! A whole language unto itself .....

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we can only hope that somone has the bright idea to start a high qual public domain reissue label-- i have never had a complaint w/Fantasy but imagine if some zealous Euro swiped their catalog, year by year, & then added their own research, photos, etc w/effort made to properly compensate the artists also? it COULD be done.

gentleman clementine

athens, ga

When Concord bought Fantasy I posted, "Why? Most of the catalog will be PD in 5 years." Made no sense to me with the EU PD labels already reissuing early Blue Note performances. Time will tell.....

Edited by wolff
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As for the current status of OJC's, you might want to check your favorite online CD sources. Notice how many titles say,"Back-ordered", or, "...more on the way". Well, when the last warehouse runs dry of 'second-tier', low-selling artists, Concord/Universal won't be motivated to press any new runs of 500 of any title.

What they WILL DO is wreak 'concept package' comps of the bigger-selling Fantasy artists, like 'Sonny After Sundown: Down-tempo Rollins', 'Monk's Magic For Every Mood', and 'Debbie Does Miles'.

I can hear 'em now in the board room: "We gotta find new angles and themes to position this stuff, you know, to 'get' the latent 'jazzsters' out there."

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