Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cadence_Records> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 88 of
88
with 100 triples per page.
- Cadence_Records abstract "Cadence Records was an American record company based in New York City whose labels had a picture of a metronome. It was founded by Archie Bleyer, who had been the musical director and orchestra leader for Arthur Godfrey in 1952. Bleyer had written a few hot songs in 1932–34 (Fletcher Henderson's "Business in F" is a good example) and had a band that recorded for ARC in 1934 and 1935 (his records were issued on Vocalion, Melotone, Perfect and Romeo). The first recording star for Cadence was Godfrey alumnus Julius La Rosa. Other Godfrey alumnae signed to the label included the Chordettes. According to legend, Bleyer was fired from the Godfrey show when he signed someone Godfrey regarded as a rival to a record deal. (Godfrey later fired singer Julius La Rosa in October 1954, causing a storm of controversy at the time.) The label also produced the early hits of Andy Williams and the Everly Brothers, as well as Johnny Tillotson and Lenny Welch. Virtuoso jazz/classical pianist Don Shirley was signed with Cadence in the 1950s and 60s. Candid Records was the company's short-lived jazz subsidiary. One of Cadence's most popular songs in the 1950s was "Eloise", written and sung by Kay Thompson.Cadence had nearly 100 charted American singles during the 1950s and into the 1960s. It produced the 1962 smash bestseller parody album, The First Family by Vaughn Meader, which was, to that time, the fastest-selling album in history, #1 on Billboard 200 for 12 weeks, featuring impressions of President John F. Kennedy, wife Jackie Kennedy, and newsmakers like Nikita Khrushchev, and Senator Hubert Humphrey. A follow-up album, The First Family, volume two, released in March 1963, reached #4, but the two albums were taken out of print following the assassination of Kennedy in Dallas. The departures of the Everly Brothers in 1960 (to Warner Bros. Records) and of Andy Williams in 1961 (to Columbia Records), along with radical changes in public taste and the music business brought on by the British Invasion, led to the rapid decline of the company by 1964. Bleyer opted to shut down Cadence, and sold Williams' masters to the singer, which he bought mainly because he wanted to keep any other buyer (Kapp Records and Liberty Records were two companies mentioned interested in buying the Cadence catalog) from reissuing his old material in competition with his new material. Bleyer wanted Williams to buy the entire Cadence catalogue, which he did. Williams reissued his old albums on Columbia and formed Barnaby Records to manage the Cadence catalogue.".
- Cadence_Records wikiPageExternalLink cadencestory.html.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageExternalLink cadence.html.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageID "594183".
- Cadence_Records wikiPageLength "4251".
- Cadence_Records wikiPageOutDegree "43".
- Cadence_Records wikiPageRevisionID "585543930".
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink ARC_Records.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink American_Record_Corporation.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Andy_Williams.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Archie_Bleyer.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Godfrey.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Barnaby_Records.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink British_Invasion.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Cadence_Magazine.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Candid_Records.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Category:American_record_labels.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Category:Pop_record_labels.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Category:Record_labels_disestablished_in_1964.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Category:Record_labels_established_in_1952.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Columbia_Records.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Don_Shirley.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Eloise_(Kay_Thompson_song).
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Fletcher_Henderson.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Hubert_Humphrey.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Jackie_Kennedy.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Jacqueline_Kennedy_Onassis.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Jazz.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink John_F._Kennedy.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Johnny_Tillotson.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Julius_La_Rosa.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Kapp_Records.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Kay_Thompson.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Lenny_Welch.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Liberty_Records.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink List_of_record_labels.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Melotone_Records_(US).
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Metronome.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink New_York_City.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Nikita_Khrushchev.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Orchestra.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Parody.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Perfect_Records.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Record_company.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Record_label.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Romeo_Records.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink The_Chordettes.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink The_Everly_Brothers.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink The_First_Family_(album).
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink United_States.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Vaughn_Meader.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Vocalion_Records.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLink Warner_Bros._Records.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLinkText "Cadence Records".
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLinkText "Cadence label".
- Cadence_Records wikiPageWikiLinkText "Cadence".
- Cadence_Records hasPhotoCollection Cadence_Records.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:For.
- Cadence_Records wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Cadence_Records subject Category:American_record_labels.
- Cadence_Records subject Category:Pop_record_labels.
- Cadence_Records subject Category:Record_labels_disestablished_in_1964.
- Cadence_Records subject Category:Record_labels_established_in_1952.
- Cadence_Records hypernym Company.
- Cadence_Records type Agent.
- Cadence_Records type Article.
- Cadence_Records type Company.
- Cadence_Records type Organisation.
- Cadence_Records type Article.
- Cadence_Records type Company.
- Cadence_Records type Disestablishment.
- Cadence_Records type Label.
- Cadence_Records type Organization.
- Cadence_Records type Agent.
- Cadence_Records type SocialPerson.
- Cadence_Records type Thing.
- Cadence_Records type Concept.
- Cadence_Records type Q18127.
- Cadence_Records type Q43229.
- Cadence_Records comment "Cadence Records was an American record company based in New York City whose labels had a picture of a metronome. It was founded by Archie Bleyer, who had been the musical director and orchestra leader for Arthur Godfrey in 1952. Bleyer had written a few hot songs in 1932–34 (Fletcher Henderson's "Business in F" is a good example) and had a band that recorded for ARC in 1934 and 1935 (his records were issued on Vocalion, Melotone, Perfect and Romeo).".
- Cadence_Records label "Cadence Records".
- Cadence_Records sameAs Cadence_Records.
- Cadence_Records sameAs Cadence_Records.
- Cadence_Records sameAs m.02th77.
- Cadence_Records sameAs Q1025118.
- Cadence_Records sameAs Q1025118.
- Cadence_Records wasDerivedFrom Cadence_Records?oldid=585543930.
- Cadence_Records isPrimaryTopicOf Cadence_Records.