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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Saga Records was a British independent record label first established in 1958. It pioneered budget-priced light classical music and jazz LPs.

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Transcription

Origins

The Saga Records label emerged from Saga Films Ltd, a venture established by the British pianist Leonard Cassini (1913–1999) who had studied at the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia[1] and broadcast frequently on the BBC from 1939 to 1974,[2][3] including an appearance at the Proms in 1957.[4] From 1955 he made films such as Watch the Music for BBC TV,[5] and having performed in Eastern Europe he had the contacts to create BBC TV documentaries using state film units in Warsaw,[6] East Berlin[7] and Budapest.[8] He registered Saga Films in October 1955, apparently with the intention of making films about composers, but lacked financial backing.

'Saga Records' initial releases

Cassini attracted investment from Wilfred Alonzo Banks, ACCA (1913–1983), a major in the Royal Army Service Corps in World War II where he was mentioned in despatches,[9] and who had subsequently developed a business to import and distribute toys and decorations. He backed Cassini's proposal to create a new classical music label, but felt that neither he nor Cassini knew how to run such a business, so in March 1958 employed William Barrington-Coupe, whose own Concert Artists label had recently collapsed, as his A&R manager.

Saga LP XID 1001 label
Saga Films Limited's first release (XID 1001) was from their initial Hamburg recording session.

Until the late 1950s, with very few exceptions, British recording studios were owned by major record companies.[10] Orchestral recording was subject to strict union rules and the margin on record sales was small. Quality 12in LPs cost c. 30/-[11] (£1.50: equivalent to £30 in 2020[12]) of which half went in manufacturing and purchase tax, and distribution and dealers took much of the rest.[13] Tape recording had been developed in Germany in the 1930s, but only became available in the UK when German tape machines, captured at the end of the war, were reverse-engineered.[13] By 1958, tape recording had become affordable and portable, making it possible to record on location with a minimum of staff.

Through their European connections, Barrington-Coupe and Banks approached producer Paul Lazare in Hamburg who had access to a studio and session musicians at low cost, some of whom were attached to the Sinfonieorchester des Norddeutschen Rundfunks.[14] Saga sent pianists Sergio Fiorentino and Joyce Hatto, both of whom were on Barrington-Coupe's books, to recording sessions Hamburg in 1958, and the orchestra was mostly directed by Erich Riede. James Lock, Barrington-Coupe's recording engineer at this time, would go on to make around five hundred recordings for Decca.They also recorded the Royal Danish Orchestra in Copenhagen under John Frandsen with Eileen Joyce and Alan Loveday. Some Russian tapes were procured, possibly through Cassini's Soviet contacts, so the public was offered quite a substantial selection of LPs, EPs and tapes when the first catalogue was published in September 1958. They were initially released by Saga Films Ltd and some of the discs were pressed by Pathé.[15] The discs arrived in record shops in October priced at 25/- (£1.25) and competed with the major record companies' re-release labels.[16] "High fidelity" tape releases were marketed by Elizabethan (Tape Recorders) Ltd branded as "Saga-Elizabethan" at 35/- (£1.75).[17] At this stage, they were all mono recordings.

Initial Saga releases (September 1958)[15]
Cat. No. Title Soloist Orchestra Conductor Venue Date
XID5001 Schumann: Piano Concerto Sergio Fiorentino Hamburg 'Pro Musica' Erich Riede Musikhalle, Hamburg 6-9 July 1958
XID5002 Tchaikovsky: Symphony No.6 Bolshoi Theatre Alexander Melik-Pashayev Moscow c. 1957
XID5003 "Night in Vienna" Leipzig Gewandhaus Otto Dobrindt Leipzig c. 1955
XID5004 Tchaikovsky: Swan Lake excerpts Bolshoi Theatre Yuri Faier
XID5005 "Songs of the Shows" 'London Variety Theatre' Thomas Hughes Hamburg?
XID5006 Beethoven: Symphony No.5 Hamburg 'Pro Musica' Erich Riede Musikhalle, Hamburg? July 1958?
XID5007 "My Favourite Encores" Eileen Joyce London? After April 1958
XID5008 Liszt: Piano Concerto No.1 Sergio Fiorentino Hamburg 'Pro Musica' Erich Riede Musikhalle, Hamburg
XID5010 Brahms: Symphony No.4 Royal Danish John Frandsen Copenhagen? 1958
XID5012 Rimsky-Korsakov: Scherazade Mikhail Karevich (violin) USSR State Radio Nathan Rakhlin Moscow? c. 1951
XID5013 Chopin/Liszt: Piano pieces Leff Pouishnoff[18] London 1958
XID5014 Beethoven, et al.: Overtures USSR State Radio Alexander Gauk Moscow c. 1958
XID5015 Arne: The Cooper Ann Dowdall,

Duncan Robertson,

Eric Shilling

Intimate Opera Company Antony Hopkins London 1958
XID5016 Chopin: Waltzes... Sergio Fiorentino Musikhalle, Hamburg 7 July 1958

Collapse and sale of the business

The major British labels started releasing stereo LPs in mid 1958, but continued to press mono releases for some years. In October 1959 Saga advertised a short-lived Stereo Multi-Play offering “for perfect reproduction on either monaural or stereo record players, thanks to a special cutting technique” at the challenging price of 45/- (£2.25).[19] By then, with further expensive recording sessions in Germany and loss-making promotional concerts in London, Saga's capital was running out. A licensing deal for distribution of Saga's tapes in the USA was struck with Roulette, who created the Forum label specially for its classical releases. Barrington-Coupe was advertising recordings that had not yet been made, including a Beethoven symphony cycle.

In February 1960, Barrington-Coupe and record producer Joe Meek formed Triumph (Superfi) Sound Ltd, targeting a teenage market was just emerging in the UK.[20] Following a clash of personalities, largely due to the different markets addressed by Saga and Triumph, Meek walked out in September. He took his artists with him to a new independent production company, RGM Sound Ltd, again backed by Wilfred Banks.[21]

Whilst other independent labels relied on budget releases of well-known orchestras hiding behind a pseudonym, Saga traded on its recognised artists. A recording of items from West Side Story was conducted by Lawrence Leonard, who had been chosen by Leonard Bernstein to conduct the London premiere. Concert promotions of Saga recording stars at the Royal Festival Hall and elsewhere were scheduled to promote the label in early 1960.[22] The London Philharmonic Choir and orchestra with soloists Harper, Watts, Robertson and Stalman under Frederic Jackson were engaged to record Handel's Messiah in May 1960, and further Hamburg sessions led to a cash crisis. Barrington-Coupe arranged to sell about fifty unissued master tapes to Marcel Rodd, but creditors foreclosed in July. The Official Receiver held Barrington-Coupe responsible for the company's collapse.[15]

Barrington-Coupe walked away, taking his artists with him, and Wilfred Banks was left with the master tapes and the Saga name. With no staff, facilities or artists on his books, Banks traded the business and its rights in over 300 master recordings to Marcel Rodd of Allied Records/Classics Club for 1,000 bargain "Lyrique" LPs, a deal completed in March 1961 once he had established that Barrington Coupe had no copyright claim over the tapes.[15]

Expansion under Allied Records

The tapes that Rodd's Allied Records had acquired from Saga Saga Films included musicals, "light classical" releases, dance and jazz bands, theatre organs and popular singers as well as classical favourites.There were over three hundred Saga titles, fifty that had belonged to Barrington-Coupe plus another hundred mono Russian recordings that had originally been imported in 1954 by the James Quality Recording Company and partially released under the Monarch label between 1954 and 1956.[23] Saga had not used them, possibly because they were not stereo.

In March 1961 Rodd hired Ted Perry (who was later to establish Hyperion) as label manager. Perry created a new full-price Celebrity sub-label which featured the Fine Arts Quartet and made John Shirley-Quirk's debut recording.

Barrington-Coupe by now had set up a new budget label, Fidelio, retailing at 12/6 (62½p) and Rodd responded with Fidelity. He reused some of the Lyrique masters which he had previously sold to Banks and acquired tapes from the French budget label Guilde Européene du Microsillon (GEM), many without documented attribution. Perry was left to sort out the details, including inventing artists for unattributed tapes and deleting tapes which had deteriorated, such as the Urania catalogue. Rodd was a difficult employer and Perry left Saga within eighteen months.

In February 1962 Marcel Rodd moved to a large Victorian house near Swiss Cottage where he converted the basement ballroom into a recording studio and set up Saga's offices on the ground floor. He and his family lived above. The disk cutting and record pressing was done at a factory in North Kensington. Robin O'Connor was recruited to replace Perry and recalled his job interview in April 1964 with Marcel Rodd:

" ... where the man himself was propped up in bed, resplendent in black pyjamas ... papers strewn all over the bed, the man's piercing gaze, the gruff voice barking out sharp questions."[24]

Rodd acquired two more failed record businesses in May 1963; the Record Society, which had promoted a specialist catalogue, and Associated Recordings which had imported Czech Supraphon discs and licensed USSR Melodiya recordings as well as Westminster's quality classical catalogue from the USA. Rodd's Classics Club label was wound up in mid 1964 and the enlarged Saga Records moved into a former paint factory at 326, Kensal Road. The non-classical repertoire was shifted onto the Society and Presto labels and the Celebrity series discontinued. Choral and organ repertoire arrived with the acquisition of Alpha Records, Oxford in 1966 and some baroque and classical chamber music was licensed from Amadeo on condition that pseudonyms concealed the musicians’ identities. Label managers came and went over the next few years.[15]

Stereo LPs introduced

By 1965 it was clear that the market wanted only stereo recordings and mono tapes were "remastered" to create a stereo effect. Saga engineers used a phase splitter and a couple of equalisers to split the signal into two, adding top frequencies to the 'A' channel (where most of the orchestral strings are usually placed) and a bit of bass to 'B' to emphasise the cellos and basses.[24] However, the rise of budget re-release labels, such as Classics for Pleasure backed by EMI, made it difficult to market these older pseudo-stereo recordings and by the end of the decade new releases were so sparse that regular advertising in Gramophone dried up in 1971.

Investment in artists and repertoire

Rodd re-hired Ted Perry as Artists and Repertoire Manager in March 1973 and gave him scope to make the sort of recordings he wanted to make. Martin Compton, a music graduate, was already on Saga's staff and became studio producer and John Shuttleworth, a teacher at Eltham College was recording engineer. recording venues with better acoustics also helped to restore Saga's reputation. Perry placed an advertisement in Gramophone claiming that new equipment produced LPs pressed “to the highest standards”, though Saga's reputation for poor quality pressing persisted. Perry launched three remastered series; SAGA 5000 budget LPs with re-released Shirley-Quirk and Baker records costing 71p, SAGA 6000 jazz LPs at £1.25, and SAGA 7000 'immortals' featuring Caruso, Melba, etc. at 95p.[25] In 1977, Perry moved on again to set up Meridian Records before creating Hyperion.

Martin Compton continued producing releases and the last new titles produced by Nicholas Dicker were added in 1984. From 1979 Saga's discs were pressed by Teldec in Germany.

Legacy

Saga's master tapes were donated by Marcel Rodd to the British Library Sound Archive in March 1989, with licence fees passed to the Saga Trust. The Trust supports the British Library Edison Fellowship programme, designed to encourage scholarship devoted to the history of recordings or western art music and music in performance.[26]

Saga Classics

In 1990 Sound-Products Holland B.V. licensed the tapes for transfer to CD and began to issue the discs in 1992, but ceased trading year later. The series was taken over by Emergo Classics until 1997, who released 46 CDs. Half of these titles originated in the 1970s, and another quarter from earlier Saga or Classics Club sessions. The balance were 1950s recordings from various sources, four of Russian origin.

Catalogue numbers

Series and catalogue number summary[15]
Label Series Range From To
Saga XID 5001-80 1958 1962 Original 12in LP Mono
Saga EFID 1001-25 1958 1959 7in 45rpm EP
Saga STA-STG 1958 1962 'Saga Sound" tapes
Saga AAA ST 4000-12 1959 "Stereo Multi-Play"
Saga STM 6001-40 1959 1961 Mainly light music
Saga STP 1013- 1961 7in 45rpm EP
Saga RGJ 7002 1960 7in 45rpm EP
Saga EFD 1501 1961 7in 45rpm EP
Saga EFP 2501 1961 7in 45rpm EP
Lyrique HPG 1001-70 1964 Mainly GEM recordings
Saga XIP 7001-15 1961 1963 Celebrity Series
Saga XID 5101-84 1961 1964 Budget Classics Club re-issues
Saga XID 5201-5338 1963 1971 Budget re-issues of XIP series
Octave OC 1-16 1962 7in 33rpm
Octave ARC 1-100 1963 1965 7in 33rpm
Saga Heritage XIG 8001-18 1963 Opera Society 78rpm transfers
Fidelity FDY 2001-85 1963 1964 Ultra budget Lyrique re-issues
Society SOC 901-1057 1963 1967 SCALA (XIL) re-issues
Presto PRE 601-90 1964 1965 STUDIO (XIC) re-issues
Opus TW 801-45 1964 Re-issued Lyrique/Fidelity
Pan SPAN 6001-10 1966 Licensed from Amadeo
Pan SPAN 6200-22 1966 1968 New and re-issued recordings
Eros 8000-8157 1966 1970 Non-classical
Boulevard 4000-4182 1967 1974 "Middle of the road"
Fidelity FDY 1900-8 1967 Fake stereo reissues
Fidelity FDY 2086-2175 1967 1969 Fake stereo reissues
Psyché PSY 30001-10 1968 1969 Full priced music, drama & poetry
Pan PAN 6300-30 1971 1972 Eros continuation (and Alpha)
Opus OPUS 1001-12 1972 1979 Re-issued late 50s stereo recordings
Saga SAGA 6900-32 1973 1975 Jazz "Immortal Sessions"
Saga SAGA 7001-30 1973 1974 "Heritage" series reissues
Saga SAGA 5336-5492 1973 1983 Perry recordings and later re-issues
Saga HAYDN 1-2 1981 1982 Aborted Haydn complete symphonies
Psyché PSY 1-17 1984 1986 Final Saga recording sessions

Working with other labels

In 1968, Trend Records which was run by London record Dealer, Barry Class had had entered into an arrangement with Saga Records for the manufacture and distribution of its product.[27][28] Class who managed The Foundations was said to have stated that he went to Saga as he had great faith in the budget market.[29]

References

  1. ^ "Cassini family (Leonard Cassini), 1926–1935 | Curtis Library and Archives". curtisarchives.libraryhost.com. Retrieved 2021-04-25.
  2. ^ "'For the A.f.s.'". The Radio Times. No. 845. 1939-12-08. p. 18. ISSN 0033-8060. Retrieved 2021-04-25.
  3. ^ "Janacek and Martinu". The Radio Times. No. 2631. 1974-04-11. p. 21. ISSN 0033-8060. Retrieved 2021-04-25.
  4. ^ "Henry Wood Promenade Concert". The Radio Times. No. 1761. 1957-08-09. p. 38. ISSN 0033-8060. Retrieved 2021-04-25.
  5. ^ "Watch the Music". The Radio Times. No. 1628. 1955-01-21. p. 44. ISSN 0033-8060. Retrieved 2021-04-25.
  6. ^ "Chopin Lives On". The Radio Times. No. 1651. 1955-07-01. p. 38. ISSN 0033-8060. Retrieved 2021-04-25.
  7. ^ "Concert Hour: The Rebellious Genius". The Radio Times. No. 1714. 1956-09-14. p. 14. ISSN 0033-8060. Retrieved 2021-04-25.
  8. ^ "Undying Rhapsody". The Radio Times. No. 1753. 1957-06-14. p. 8. ISSN 0033-8060. Retrieved 2021-04-25.
  9. ^ "Supplement" (PDF). London Gazette. 1946-04-04. p. 1648.
  10. ^ Kirby, Philip (2015). "The Emergence of the UK Studio Sector 1930-1960" (PDF). The Evolution and Decline of the Traditional Recording Studio (PhD). Liverpool University. Retrieved 2021-04-25.
  11. ^ "Analytical Notes and First Reviews". Gramophone. June 1959.
  12. ^ Archives, The National. "The National Archives - Currency converter: 1270–2017". Currency converter. Retrieved 2021-04-25.
  13. ^ a b Curran, Terence (2015). Recording classical music in Britain: The long 1950s (DPhil thesis). Wadham College, University of Oxford.
  14. ^ Paul Lazar had been producing recordings in Hamburg for RCA, MGM and other labels and was responsible for some famously bad recordings in which the soloists were recorded in London and the orchestra and chorus added in Hamburg. "The Allegro-Royale Mikado (1954)". Gilbert & Sullivan Discography. Retrieved 2021-04-28.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Stuart, Philip (2017). Classic Club / Saga 1956–1986 A discographical adventure. Sheffield: Classical Recordings Quarterly Editions.
  16. ^ "Disc Corner". Worthing Gazette. 1958-11-12.
  17. ^ "Saga-Ellizabethan". Gramophone. 1958-10-01. p. 81.
  18. ^ Some tracks by Fiorentino (uncredited)
  19. ^ "Multiplay Records". Gramophone. 1959-10-01. p. Advert 27.
  20. ^ Reetze, Jan (2006). "Part 1: 1960 - The start". The Triumph Records Story. Retrieved 2021-04-28.
  21. ^ "Part 4: Triumph productions on other labels". The Triumph Records Story. Retrieved 2021-04-28.
  22. ^ "Saga Recording Artists at the Royal Festival Hall". Gramophone. 1960-04-01. p. 35.
  23. ^ James Quality Recording Co. Ltd launched the Monarch label in Gramophone December 1952 (p.xxvii). The releases were promoted as "true balance" recordings of high quality operatic and classical works and priced at 39/6 (£1.97½), but met mixed reviews. The USSR releases were announced in September 1954 (Gramophone p.142, advertisement p.xxiv), again at full price and artistically well received, but with some reservations about the technical aspects of the recordings. Desmond Shaw-Taylor reviewing these recordings a year later (Gramophone, September 1955 p.1) states "The prime merit of these recordings ... is their authenticity, especially the superb Russian choral singing and orchestral playing. The main drawbacks are the congested and often distorted recording, which never approaches good Western quality." An advertisement in Gramophone in February 1956 stated that the company was "in the process of complete re-organisation", and the last advertisement appeared in April. The company was dissolved in 1965 (The London Gazette No.43549 p.449)
  24. ^ a b Robin, O'Connor (February 2007). "Saga Remembered". MusicWeb-International. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  25. ^ Display advertisement text; "We have now completed the rebuilding and re-equipping of our factory and SAGA records are now pressed on modern high-quality presses to the highest standards, The lacquers are cut on the very latest-design cutting lathes and processed in our own chemical department to rigorous standards of quality. Our quality control department is staffed by a team of highly-trained and efficient inspectors and testers, using up-to-the-minute auditory and optical equipment" ("Welcome Home SAGA 5000". Gramophone. 1973-09-01. pp. 480–481.)
  26. ^ "THE SAGA TRUST - Charity 803266". register-of-charities.charitycommission.gov.uk. Retrieved 2021-04-30.
  27. ^ Seventies Sevens - TREND
  28. ^ Beat Instrumental, February, 1968 - Page 24 INSTRUMENTAL NEWS, BARRY CLASS STARTS TREND RECORD LABEL
  29. ^ Seventies Sevens - TREND
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