This side features "
Rock Around The Clock", "
Ain't That A Shame", and "
Autumn Leaves". Although many sources give
1953 as the establishment date for
Waldorf Music Hall, none of their releases appears to predate 1954.
Enoch Light's promotional literature identifies Waldorf Music Hall as the first record label he began on his own, with
Light's
Project 3 label debuting in
1967. Therefore the
Waldorf label was "Project 1" whilst
Grand Award Records and its later subsidiary
Command Records became "Project 2". It was begun as a generic, "soundalike" label, with Light's stable of artists --
Loren Becker,
Artie Malvin,
Lois Winter,
Dottie Evans and others -- reproducing the hits of the day. Some have regarded Waldorf Music Hall as the first such label, but it appears that
Big 4 Hits, a label based out of
Cincinnati and headed by
Carl Burkhardt, was established in
1952 and is therefore earlier. Emblazoned with the triangular logo "
FDR" -- meaning "Full
Dynamic Range," signifying high fidelity, but also invoking an acronym for a popular
American president -- Waldorf Music Hall was primarily a 10" LP label with 8 hits apiece; 48 releases in the
3300 series appeared between
January 1954 and December
1957. Waldorf Music Hall also issued 45 rpm EPs of the same material; 78 rpm releases were issued on a plain label simply called "Waldorf" and on another subsidiary, 18
Top Hits.
The 10" Lps sold for 99 cents, and the
singles for 69 cents apiece.
As mainstream pop vocals in the hit market began to give way to rock n' roll hits,
Hit Parader type versions of these began to sound considerably more quaint and old-fashioned compared to the originals. Fortunately, Waldorf Music Hall had begun to diversify its offerings already through a $1.49 12"
album program that featured coherent offerings ranging from classical and opera to children's records, jazz, dance music and gospel. In
1955, Light had begun his higher profile
Grand Award label and this drew some attention away from Waldorf Music Hall; the Hit Parader issues stopped at the end of 1957. However, at the same time Waldorf gained a budget subsidiary,
Colortone Records. In
1959, Enoch Light sold all of his labels to AM-PAR and became part of their organization. Grand Award continued, but at this
point Waldorf Music Hall became dormant, having served its short-lived purpose.
- published: 10 Feb 2014
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