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Jac Holzman, founder
of Elektra Records |
The Elektra
Records Story
Elektra
Records was started by Jac Holzman in December, 1950, in New York City.
Elektra initially recorded folk music, ethnic music, jazz and gospel,
although it later expanded into blues, pop, and rock music.
Jac Holzman was born in September 1931 on the Upper East Side of New York to
upper middle class parents. His father was a successful doctor. Jac Holzman
rebelled against his parents' life style and ran away from home many times.
When he was 12 years old, he got as far as Trenton, New Jersey, and holed up
in a hotel room but was found and taken home. His parents did have
state-of-the-art phonograph equipment, and Jac wrapped himself up in music
and radio. His grandmother was Estelle Stenberger who was the head of the
National Council of Jewish Women and did political commentary on radio
station WQXR. Jac would frequently go with his grandmother to the station for
her radio broadcasts, where he became interested in radio. He began to
experiment with electronics by building crystal radio sets. This activity
stopped when his parents shipped him off to the Peekskill Military Academy
for two years. In 1946, he successfully pestered his father for a Meissner
semi-professional disc recorder for his fifteenth birthday, which he used to
record bar mitzvahs and weddings.
Jac graduated from high school at sixteen and entered St. John's College in
Annapolis, Maryland. He pretty much ignored his school work, missing most of
his classes. St. John's had an electronics lab where Jac would hang out
working with electronic equipment. In the early fall of 1950, Jac attended a
recital at St. John's by soprano Georgianna Banister. The recital featured
musical settings of poems by Rilke, Holderlin and e.e. cummings, accompanied
by the music's composer, John Gruen. Jac felt the music was worth recording
so Jac decided to start a record company and do it himself. Holzman asked
Banister and Gruen to record for this non-existent record company.
On October 10, 1950, Jac decided to use the
name Elektra for his company and in December 1950 recorded New Songs By John
Gruen in one three hour session at Peter Bartok's recording studio in New
York City. Jac took the tapes to RCA for mastering and pressing. He received
the test pressings in February, 1951, but was disappointed to find the music
was barely audible above the surface noise. He complained to RCA and they
agreed to do another transfer, so Jac went from St. John's to New York to
supervise. This effort was successful and in March, 1951, Jac received 500
copies of Elektra EKLP-1. Jac found a national distributor who agreed to take
100 records, but demanded 50 additional free copies for "promotional
purposes". By the fall of 1951, the distributor returned all 100 records, the
only records sold came out of the 50 freebies. So far, Elektra was a
money-losing venture.
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Estelle
Stenberger,
Holzman's Grandmother
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After his junior year, the
acting Dean of St. John's "suggested" that Jac take time off before starting
his senior year to get his bearings. His parents were upset, but Jac moved
back to New York and settled in Greenwich Village. He took a five dollar a
week walk-up at 40 Grove Street. In order to make ends meet, Jack started a
record store at 189 West 10th Street which he named "The Record Loft". He had
about 1000 records for sale, of which 400 were folk music titles. Many of the
folkies living in Greenwich Village would stop into the store just to browse
and talk music. One day, George Pickow came into the store and mentioned that
his wife was a folk singer (he was married to Kentucky folk singer
Jean Ritchie). Jac was impressed with Ritchie, and decided to record her.
Because Jac Holzman was still under 21, his father had to co-sign the
contract. The second Elektra LP [EKLP-2] was a 10 inch album with the
unwieldy title Jean Ritchie Singing the Traditional Songs of Her Kentucky
Mountain Family. The record received great reviews, and Jac predicted in a
letter to Ritchie that it would eventually sell 2000 copies.
Elektra Records was off and running, and after the success of the Ritchie
album, Jac purchased his own recording equipment. He bought a Magnecord PT-6
tape machine with an Electro-Voice Hammerhead microphone. Elektra continued
to release folk albums with records by Frank Warner, Shep Ginandes, Cynthia
Gooding, Hally Wood and Tom Paley in 1952 and 1953. In 1954, Elektra issued
it's first blues albums, two by Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee. In 1954, with
eight records released, Jac closed the Record Loft and moved Elektra to
larger offices at 361 Bleecker Street.
Jac met
Theodore Bikel in 1955, Bikel was an actor that had come from England to
the United States to be in a Broadway play. Bikel was born in Vienna, but
moved to Palestine before World War II. Bikel had no interest in singing on
records, but Jac talked him into making a record of folk songs. Jac asked him
to record the songs he knew best and he recorded a 10 inch album [EKL-32]
titled Folk Songs of Israel, which did very well. Theodore Bikel became the
mainstay of Elektra from 1956 to 1961, eventually because of his importance
to the founding of Elektra, Holzman sold Bikel a 5% share of Elektra for
$20,000 which returned a half million to Bikel when Elektra was sold.
Jac met a neighbor in his apartment building, Nina Merrick, in 1955. Jac
knocked on her door and asked to borrow some napkins. Later, he asked her
out, and on their third date asked her to marry him. Nina Holzman became the
first paid employee of the Elektra Record Company.
Elektra continued to expand, and they next signed
Josh White, a major folk singing star. Josh started recording in 1931,
and in the early '50s was recording for the major label Decca, when abruptly
Decca refused to record him because he had been placed on the Joe McCarthy
blacklist (Joe McCarthy was a United States Senator who built his career with
Communist witch hunts in the early '50s. His underhanded tactics later got
him censured by the Senate.). Anyone who was put on the blacklist - because
of suspected or rumored Communist leanings - found themselves unable to work
because the large record companies, radio and TV networks would not hire
anyone on the blacklist. Many of the early folk singing stars found
themselves in the same situation, including
Woody Guthrie,
Pete
Seeger and the
Weavers. Josh White was put on the blacklist because he refused to
testify against his friend
Paul
Robeson. When Decca would not record him, Holzman defied the blacklisting
and signed White to Elektra and issued several successful albums.
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Judy Collins |
Elektra continued to expand into the early '60s with a catalog dominated by
folk music. Holzman signed one of his most important artists in 1961, when
Judy
Collins signed an Elektra contract. Her first album [EKL-209], titled A
Maid of Constant Sorrow, was recorded at Fine Sound Studio on 57th Street and
sold about five thousand copies. Many critics dismissively called her a
Joan
Baez clone, but Holzman immediately began work on her next album, Golden
Apples of the Sun [EKL-222]. Jac Holzman had become so involved in the
day-to-day management of Elektra that he turned over production of the
Collins album to Mark Abramson. With this album and the many more Judy
Collins recorded for Elektra, she forged a distinctive style of her own and
had great success for them.
After 1961, it was rare for Jac to produce an artist himself, as he turned
over most of the production work to Abramson, and later Paul Rothchild. Jac
concentrated on Elektra management and the signing of new artists. In 1962,
Jac thought that New York had become stale musically, so he opened a west
coast office on Santa Monica Boulevard and Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles.
Holzman moved his family to California. When Jac heard the astonishing first
album by
Bob Dylan - and realized Elektra had missed out on Dylan while he was in
California - he closed down the west coast office and moved back to New York.
Shortly after returning to New York, Holzman hired Paul Rothchild as a
producer and gave him the
Even Dozen Jug Band to produce. The Even Dozen Jug Band, with 12 members,
did not have much success for Elektra but many of the members went on to
future fame, including John Sebastian (Lovin'
Spoonful), Steve Katz (Blood,
Sweat and Tears) and
Maria Muldaur (top-10 hit "Midnight at the Oasis").
Elektra moved more seriously into blues music in 1963, leasing a record by
three white bluesmen. The record, titled Blues, Rags and Hollers by
Koerner, Ray and Glover, was very influential. Koerner, Ray and Glover
came to New York and recorded directly for Elektra. Elektra moved into
electric blues when Paul Rothchild signed the
Paul Butterfield Blues Band in 1965. Rothchild ended up recording their
first album three times before he felt he got it right. The album cost
$50,000, which was a staggering sum for the time, but the album was brilliant
and sold more copies than any other Elektra album up to that time. As Paul
Rothchild has since said, "It made the electric blues a viable form for
popular music". When Bob Dylan wanted to perform at Newport with an electric
band to back him up, he got the Butterfield Blues Band.
In 1963 Jac came up with an idea to start a classical music label as part of
Elektra, remembering back to his college days when he wanted to buy two
classical albums but could only afford one. He wanted to make it possible for
people to buy inexpensive classical records, just like you were able to buy
paperback copies of great literature. To keep costs low, he knew that he
would not be able to record the music himself, so he flew to Europe and saw
the large classical record companies in England and France. He secured the
cream of the crop of their classical music titles from their vaults for $500
per album plus a royalty. The record companies contacted were happy to lease
Jac albums that they had no chance of ever marketing in the United States
themselves. Jac named the label
Nonesuch,
and Bill Harvey, the artistic director of Elektra, came up with distinctive
packaging. The slogan for the Nonesuch line was "Quality Recordings at the
Price of a Quality Paperback". Nonesuch records sold for $2.50, half the
price of a classical album by the majors. The Nonesuch label was very
successful and became a money making machine for Elektra.
Eventually, Elektra did record two of the most successful albums on Nonesuch
by using one of their own employees.
Joshua Rifkin was a classically trained musician and a former member of
the Even Dozen Jug Band who was working as an arranger for Elektra. In 1965,
Jac had asked Rifkin to do an album of classical interpretations of
Lennon-McCartney songs, and the result was The Baroque Beatles Book {Elektra
EKS-7306]. The record took off, making #83 on the Billboard Album charts, and
was even played on AM radio. Later, Rifkin proposed to Jac that they do an
album of
Scott
Joplin piano rags for Nonesuch. Jac agreed, and the result was Piano Rags
By Scott Joplin [Nonesuch 73026] which led to a revival of ragtime in the
United States, and later the use of Scott Joplin's music in the movie The
Sting.
In 1965, Elektra had the inside track to sign the Lovin' Spoonful because of
Elektra's relationship with John Sebastian (in the Even Dozen Jug band and by
using him as a session player). Paul Rothchild lobbied Jac to pay the $10,000
being asked by the group, but Holzman thought the price was too high.
Moreover, Holtzman felt that to justify the price tag, it would force Elektra
to sell top forty singles. Elektra had never had a successful single, but
Holzman finally agreed, and the $10,000 was paid to the group. Then the Lovin'
Spoonful were told that a contract they had signed for publishing rights to
their songs included a provision to record for the publishing company's
record arm, Kama Sutra. Elektra felt they had legal claim to the Lovin'
Spoonful, but Jac decided not to start a messy court battle because of his
friendship with John Sebastian.
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Arthur Lee
& Love |
After losing the Lovin' Spoonful, who became fabulously successful, Jac
Holzman was on the lookout for a breakthrough pop band for Elektra. The New
York groups had been picked over by the record companies with lots of pop
experience, so in 1965 Jac Holzman headed for Los Angeles again. On the
Sunset strip Jac discovered the band
Love, headed by Arthur Lee. In his autobiography, Holzman said of Love,
"Five guys of all colors, black, white and psychedelic-that was a real first.
My heart skipped a beat. I had found my band!" Elektra started a new
numbering system with the first Love album [EKS-74001] and for the first time
in Elektra history they put a single onto the charts with "My Little Red
Book." In 1967, Love followed their first album with "Forever Changes"
[EKL-74013] which is incredible, an album that ranks near the top as one of
the best albums ever made.
In May, 1966, Jac flew to Los Angeles to meet with Love, who were playing at
the Whiskey-A-Go-Go. Their opening act was a group which Arthur Lee had a
high opinion of, and Lee suggested that Jac sign them to Elektra. Jac
initially was unimpressed with the group but went back several times to see
them perform. On his fourth visit, Jac realized that this was no
run-of-the-mill rock band and decided to sign them. The group was the
Doors. Jac wanted Paul Rothchild to produce them, but when Rothchild flew
to L.A. to hear them, he told Holzman he was nuts for signing the group and
that he (Rothchild) did not want to produce them. Finally, Jac told him,
"Paul, I never thought I'd say this to you, but you owe me. You've got to do
this band. You are the only person for the job." Rothchild reluctantly
agreed. The group was taken to Tutti Camarata's Disney studios to record
their first album, which took about a week. Elektra issued "Break on Through
(To the Other Side)" as the first single from the album, and it received
modest airplay stalling at number 106. They immediately issued the second
single from the album, "Light My Fire". The version on the album is seven
minutes long, and Jac insisted it be cut for AM play. The Doors said it
couldn't be cut, but Rothchild edited the song to about three minutes and
then played it for them. They all agreed to issue it. In June, 1967, "Light
My Fire" reached the Number One position in the pop charts, becoming
Elektra's first #1 single. The album was just as successful, and in the last
30 years the Doors have sold over 45 million records.
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Tim Buckley |
With the success of the Doors and Love, Elektra moved away from the small
folk label image to a label that could handle rock acts. Holzman decided to
establish a west coast office again and built a state-of- the-art studio at
962 North La Cienega Boulevard. This established a permanent west coast
presence for Elektra, and Jac Holzman began dividing his time between New
York and L.A. By the late '60s, Elektra was having success with the Doors,
Judy Collins,
Tim
Buckley and a group called
Bread. But the record business was changing, and Jac knew Elektra could
not survive as a small independent label. He did not want to merge Elektra
with any of the long established (bureaucratic) majors,
Columbia,
RCA,
Decca or
Capitol.
As early as 1966, he had talked with Warner Brothers about a sale, and became
friends with Mo Ostin who was running the
Reprise
label for Warners. In 1967,
Warner
Brothers had purchased
Atlantic
Records, a label whose rise had paralleled Elektra. Jac talked to Mo
Ostin, who had recently become head of Warner Brothers, about combining the
two companies and establishing a record distribution arm. Ostin went to Steve
Ross, the chairman of the Warner Brothers parent company Kinney Corp. (later
called Warner Communications), and proposed that they buy Elektra. In
negotiations with Warner Brothers, Jac Holzman asked for, and received, 10
million dollars for the company. Jac Holzman agreed to remain with the
company for three years, with Warner Brothers having an option for two
additional years.
Jac Holzman continued to run Elektra under the Warner Communications
umbrella. He signed
Carly
Simon, and she had a lot of success with the label. He also signed
Harry
Chapin to the label and was so excited with his talent that he returned
to record production for the first time in many years to do Chapin's Heads
and Tales album [Elektra EKS-75023]. By 1973, Holzman wanted to retire to a
home he built in Maui, Hawaii. When Warner Communications missed the deadline
for picking up the option for the two additional years of service required by
his contract. Holzman notified them that he was leaving the company. Warner's
tried to change his mind, but Jac Holzman retired at the age of 42 in Hawaii.
During the mid to late '70s, Elektra expanded its roster of artists from pop
(Neil
Sedaka,
Tony
Orlando & Dawn,
Sparks, the
Cars, etc) to country (Eddie
Rabbitt and
Jerry Lee Lewis, among others), heavy rock (Queen)
and soul and funk (Patrice
Rushen and
Donald
Byrd). Elektra also released records by punk/new wave groups such as
Television and the
Dictators. Elektra Records and
Asylum
Records were combined in 1974.
In 1982, Elektra founded its own jazz-rock orientated subsidiary Elektra
Musician, while adopting a new consolidated numbering system, the 60000
series (which is still running today), and setting up distribution deals for
labels such as
Beserkley,
Planet,
Solar, and
others.
Elektra continues today as part of Time-Warner Communications and is still
very successful releasing records by such different artists as
Metallica,
Third Eye Blind, or rapper
Ol' Dirty Bastard, as well as distributing independent English-founded
labels as Mute
(Depeche
Mode) or
Fiction (The
Cure). Jac Holzman wrote his autobiography titled Follow the Music: The
Life and High Times of Elektra Records in the Great Years of American Pop
Culture (with Gavan Daws) in 1998.
By David Edwards, Mike Callahan
and Patrice Eyries
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