- This article is about the 1940s-era Vogue Records in the U.S. and Disques Vogue, a longer-lived label in France; there is also a Vogue Records International based in Ottawa.
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Vogue Records is the name of two
companies/
labels founded in the
1940s.
USA
Vogue Records was a short-lived
United States based
record label of the
1940s, noted for the artwork embedded in the records themselves. Founded in
1946 as part of
Sav-Way Industries of
Detroit, Michigan, the discs were initially a hit, because of the novelty of the colorful artwork, and the improved sound compared to the
shellac records dominant at the time. The discs were manufactured by first sandwiching printed illustrations around a core of aluminum, then coating both sides with clear
vinyl upon which the grooves were stamped.
The company went out of business the following year, having released betweem 67 and 74 double-sided 78 rpm gramophone records. Some of the Vogue issues were re-releases of recordings originally issued by other companies.
The colorful artwork on the records have made Vogue Records a collector's item.
France
An unrelated
Disques Vogue was founded in
France in
1947, the same year that the USA Vogue closed shop. They originally specialized in
jazz recordings, featuring such artists as
Sidney Bechet,
Django Reinhardt,
Dizzy Gillespie,
Lionel Hampton, and
Errol Garner. In the late
1950s Vogue expanded into
pop music, recording
Petula Clark and other popular singers of the era.
The label's United Kingdom sister label was Pye Nixa Records. The label's catalog is today part of Sony BMG.
See also
External links
American record labels | Defunct record labels
French record labels
Vogue Records