By continuing to use the site, you agree to our use of cookies and to abide by our Terms and Conditions. We in turn value your personal details in accordance with our Privacy Policy.
Please log in or register. Registered visitors get fewer ads.
Gerry and the pacemakers youll never walk alone. the track especially written for you Ferry Across the Mersey to the Wirral didnt reach number 1 unfortunately.
0
Columbia...no really on 18:09 - Jul 3 with 3407 views
Good shout, or is it? I'm scratching my head and trying to summon up 50 year old memories of buying Beatles singles in the mid sixties. Parlophone, weren't they?
[Post edited 3 Jul 2018 18:10]
0
Columbia...no really on 18:23 - Jul 3 with 3377 views
Gerry and the pacemakers youll never walk alone. the track especially written for you Ferry Across the Mersey to the Wirral didnt reach number 1 unfortunately.
This is the best version. ðŸ‘
0
Columbia...no really on 18:25 - Jul 3 with 3374 views
Columbia...no really on 22:24 - Jul 3 by Gowerjack
I think you'll find the fabs USA releases were on Capitol Records in the main.
Some early stuff was on the VJ label and of course from 1968 onwards Apple ( but still distributed by Capitol).
I likes the Fabs me...
[Post edited 3 Jul 2018 22:28]
I stand corrected you are right I got my labels beginning with c mixed up...I knew they were on a label. Beginning with c in the us I love the Fabs too
Columbia was a sub-label of CBS records, which was sold to Sony in the late 80s.
Two different Columbia records as it happens.
Columbia in the US were CBS, now Sony. CBS was used in UK (and, in fact, everywhere outside North America) as the label as Columbia records in the UK was Columbia Gramophone who were part of EMI.
One of records mentioned above, Gerry and the Pacemakers, were on Columbia here (EMI) as were Pink Floyd which wasn’t same as Simon & Garfunkel who were US Columbia (CBS). It wasn’t all sorted out until EMI sold the rights to Columbia name in UK and rest of the world (outside North America) to Sony in 1990.