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Jock_Girl 4th Oct 2015
| | You should also note the rim print that says 'Manufactured in USA by Miami Records under license from Columbia Records' --- they would not be able to say 'Columbia Records' if it was the UK version as that name could not be used. It would have to have at least said Columbia Records UK. If it had been the UK version it would have to say EMI. |
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Neil Forbes 3rd Oct 2015
| | Just remember to clear the spaghetti off before attempting to read the label, ha-ha. |
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Record Collector 3rd Oct 2015
| | The green was Italian |
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Neil Forbes 3rd Oct 2015
| | For LPs on CBS, Orange was regular popular content while blue was reserved for classical recordings. I don't think they ever used green. In the USA, red was the main colour for popular music, followed later(around 1972) by gold. I've not seen many American Columbia classical LPs so I wouldn't know what colour those labels were. |
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Record Collector 3rd Oct 2015
| | Interesting about CBS was at a radio station once now I seen a orange label a blue one but never a green label |
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Neil Forbes 3rd Oct 2015
| | I was going by the Magic Notes trademark, which American CBS had long ago abandoned in favour of their "Speaker on Stand" otherwise described as "walking eye" or, as Fixbutte once suggested, stylus on record(you'd have to turn the trademark 180 degrees to see that). But I've always believed South American Columbia to be affiliated with EMI. |
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Jock_Girl 3rd Oct 2015
| | Umm ... in fact .. no --- this was US Columbia .. and the label Discos Columbia lives on and issued Spanish language disc for artists such Gloria Estefan in the 1980s. The Columbia name was licenced from CBS/ Columbia by a company in Miami Florida and as such was abl eto do its own thing. |
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Record Collector 3rd Oct 2015
| | Ummmm.........yeah |
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Neil Forbes 3rd Oct 2015
| | CBS in the USA ceased using the Magic Notes logo many years before, when the original Columbia Graphophone Company of New York was liquidated(wound up). The trademark lived on in Britain where what had started merely as a UK division, became the parent company because of the demise of the US company. The Hispanic wing, Discos Columbia, would be an offshoot of EMI rather than CBS, as CBS no longer had any stake in EMI whatsoever by 1964. The only reason CBS in the USA would be making this disc, is under contract for an unrelated client. |
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Jock_Girl 18th Jan 2013
| | Yes -- this is regular issue 78 from 1964 issued in the USA. Discos Columbia, the Hispanic wing of Columbia records continued pressing 78s until the mid 60s primarily for the market in Puerto Rico. The date is substantiated by this webpage:
http://www.eltriolospanchos.com/eltriolospanchos/cancionero/Discografia/discografiacompletaAlfabetica.htm |
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