Harry James And His Orchestra
"One O'Clock Jump" recorded Jan 5, 1938 / previously released on Brunswick 8055
"Two O'Clock Jump" recorded Mar 6, 1939 / previously released on Brunswick 8337
Images
Number:432061 THUMBNAIL Uploaded By:LaurenceD SUBS Edited By:xiphophilos Description: Columbia 36232 A side label (original July 1941 release)
Number:432062 Uploaded By:LaurenceD SUBS Description: Columbia 36232 B side label (original July 1941 release)
Number:1444450 Uploaded By:Bob1951 Description: Columbia 36232 A side label (August-December 1941 repress)
Number:1444451 Uploaded By:Bob1951 Description: Columbia 36232 B side label (August-December 1941 repress)
Number:1005513 Uploaded By:Trainman Description: Columbia 36232 A side label (ca. 1943 repress)
Number:1005515 Uploaded By:Trainman Edited By:xiphophilos Description: Columbia 36232 B side label (ca. 1943 repress)
Thanks, this helped me to refine my own notes on these labels. This is what I have learned so far from W.B.lbl in combination with M. Sherman & K. Nauck, "Note The Notes: An Illustrated History of the Columbia Record Label 1901-1958," page 9, https://www.friktech.com/labels/ColumbiaLabelography.pdf, and my own observations:
The original July 1941 release (LaurenceD's labels) shows a CBS label with "Trade Mark" under the CBS logo and three lines of patent text under COLUMBIA, listing patents 1625705 and RE 16588 (used September 1939-July 1941).
Bob's copy represents an August - December 1941 CBS label without needle promotion and with three lines of patent text under COLUMBIA, listing the patents 1625705 and 1702564.
Trainman's copy is from ca. 1943: CBS label with three lines of patent text under COLUMBIA, listing the patents 1625705 and 1702564 and the phrase "Use Columbia Needles" (used Jan. 1942-Oct. 1945); the inner pressing ring (ca, 1.14" diameter) shows up in 1943.
The "For perfect tone..." language first showed up in January 1942, hence {Images #1444450 & 1444451} without that blurb has been moved to before {Images #1005513 & 1005514} which do have it.
Label variant images added. "Trade Mark" is not above Columbia. Although difficult to see, the patent phrasing below Columbia appears to be different than on the original label images.