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obsucure west coast jazz label REX: the porno connection


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http://www.hensteeth.com/rem.html

saw this and found it discographicorically relevant///

the only thing i know about this label is they released that one Teddy Edwards 10". i have never even seen the cover or title of it. but i know its true. does anyone know more abouyt the jazz releases-- are there others?

well anyways what this is, what i noticed and thought of even before i read the description, is that this label and the label scan of the REX teddy lp ive seen, look very very similar...!!

SO FAR I KNOW ABOUT REX TWO (2) THINGS:

-they had Teddy Edwards records

-they had dirty sex not really dirty sex records

Pfffst! and world pacific think theyre so out there with their sitar, lolol strum strum strum

Edited by chewy
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Damn - my secret is out ;)

"The SIDEWINDERS

--male vocal with trumpet, clarinet & rhythm, Associated Cinema Studios, Hollywood, 1936. Hollywood, c. 1936. L-0328 is uncredited on all issues.

(L-0326) His Barrel Is Long RACY RECORDS HS-412

-Under its correct title "She Comes Rolling Down The Mountain" *** unnumbered (L-0326)

(L-0328) The Virgin Ranger HOLLYWOOD HOT SHOTS unnumbered, GOOD-HUMOR unnumbered white label, flipside has regular GOOD-HUMOR label [b/w "Piddlin' Pup" No. 691], NOVELTY RECORD unnumbered typewritten label; Allied logo on reverse single face

-as Virginian Virgin PARTY TIME No. 2 (1118"

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http://www.hensteeth.com/rem.html

saw this and found it discographicorically relevant///

the only thing i know about this label is they released that one Teddy Edwards 10". i have never even seen the cover or title of it. but i know its true. does anyone know more abouyt the jazz releases-- are there others?

well anyways what this is, what i noticed and thought of even before i read the description, is that this label and the label scan of the REX teddy lp ive seen, look very very similar...!!

I've got a pretty nice 78rpm jazz combo on that label at home. Artist name and tracks escape me right now (obscure stuff, will check out tonight, and am not sure if it says REX or REM on the label but the label design looks just like the one under that link).

As for Teddy Edwards, weren't the Roy Porter Big Band tunes (feat. Teddy Edwards) also released on that label?

BTW, if you come across other REX releases, make sure you know which is which. There were "REX" and "REX of Hollywood" and they are NOT the same.

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[Why is it that, every time I try to post something complicated, the effin' connection fux up? If I didn't have bad luck, I wouldn't have no luck at all. It's taken nearly two hours to get back in!

Here we go again.]

I think Rex and Rex of Hollywood might have been the same firm. Galen Gart’s ARLD for 1940-1959 only lists one Rex label in LA. It was owned by Maurice A Rapoport and changed its name to Rem in about May 1949. It had several numbering series:

100 - ? (had reached 128 by 4/1949)

501 - ? (dates from 1945)

23000 - ? (had reached 23005 by 5/1949)

25000 - ? (had reached 25059 by 4/1949)

26000 - ? (had reached 26027 by 1947)

28000 - ? (had reached 28016 by 4/1949)

29000 - ? (had reached 29000 :) by 4/1949)

It wouldn't surprise me if one or more of these series included the words “of Hollywood” on the label.

Rapoport also owned the Metro label, which also had a 23000 series which had reached 23005 by 4/1948.

Gart doesn't list any numbering series for Rem.

MG

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There's another Rex label that seems to have been based in New York. I have a 78 album set of Barney Bigard on Rex (RX J-9001 and -9002).

http://www.hensteeth.com/rem.html

saw this and found it discographicorically relevant///

the only thing i know about this label is they released that one Teddy Edwards 10". i have never even seen the cover or title of it. but i know its true. does anyone know more abouyt the jazz releases-- are there others?

well anyways what this is, what i noticed and thought of even before i read the description, is that this label and the label scan of the REX teddy lp ive seen, look very very similar...!!

SO FAR I KNOW ABOUT REX TWO (2) THINGS:

-they had Teddy Edwards records

-they had dirty sex not really dirty sex records

Pfffst! and world pacific think theyre so out there with their sitar, lolol strum strum strum

Edited by jazztrain
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the only thing i know about this label is they released that one Teddy Edwards 10". i have never even seen the cover or title of it. but i know its true. does anyone know more abouyt the jazz releases-- are there others?

If you do a google search in Billboard for "Teddy Edwards Rex Records" check the April 16, 1949 edition, page 48, for an ad for Rex Records. It gives several Teddy Edwards releases under BOP-COMBO. Many of these tracks were issued on LP on the ONYX label as Central Avenue Breakdown, Vols 1 & 2. Here is the link:

http://tiny.cc/qTTbu

Jim

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WHOOAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!!!!!! nice james harrod-- NICE! billboard really had some good stuff in it back in the day! look at all those rex records!! good job!

hmmm interesting...kay starr, and its the headline...was this b4 she was on capitol?

how does it search the text for REX when its just a pic n stuf and not actual computer-text??!?? weird

wahts thats slogan at the bottom of the ad?!?

Edited by chewy
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OMG OMGOMGOGMGOMG I JUST FOND THE SWEETEST CROWN RECORDS AD VIA THAT BILLBOARD STUFF....

http://books.google.com/books?id=5QoEAAAAM...rds&f=false

OGMOMGOMGOMGOMGOMG!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I LOVE YOU JAMES HARROD I LVOE YOU I LVOE OOIOLVLEOYUOUOUO

okokokokok edit:

ive just learned FOUR NEW THINGS ABOUT CROWN:

1: "...finest recording studios IN THE WORLD" omg this is proof a lot of crown might not of really been recorded at crown headquarters/ or LA etc etc...i always was fishy of those symphony orchestra ones, etc! lol

2. crown also sold metal record rack display cases for their crown product?!

3. ive never seen tghose "this is stereo" box sets! i really want to find one now!!!!

4. look at all those local distributors!

Edited by chewy
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What you been smokin', man? :crazy::crazy:

Would you please hip me to what's so great about that MOR pop pap listing on Crown? Surely a lot less memorable than their R&B/jazz stuff.

Guess just to keep up I'd have to start drooling now about that Crown LP of Maxwell Davis's tribute to Stan Kenton recording (see "Bright Orange" label thread somewhere else here) that I found last Saturday ...

So don'tcha think it's about time to climb down from that limb again? :winky::winky:

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JESUS!!!!!!!!!! LOOK AT THIS ONE!!!!!!!!!!!!! CROWN-WEST INDIES DISTRUTION DEAL.... OMFG x 100,000,000,000,000!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

http://books.google.com/books?id=jyIEAAAAM...rds&f=false

SO I TAKE IT BILLBORD IS THE PLACE TO GO FOR OBSCURE RECORD LABEL HISTORY INFO?? I CANT BELIEVE THERE WAS A PRINT OUTLET FOR STUFF LIKE THIS!!!!!!!! I ALWAYS THOUGHT BILLBOARD WAS AN INDUSTRY-PAT ON THE BACK DISH RAG THAT LABEL EXECS USE TO PLAY WITH THEMSELVES IN THE MCA EXCEUTUIVE WASHROOM. BOY WAS I WRONG!!!!!!!!

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ok i still have no idea what yr talking about? so what are the boooks like? is it very detalied history of RnB labels?

It's a month-by-month collection of the original wording of Billboard news features and articles, reviews, club overviews, etc. as well as LOTS of ad facsimile reprints of whatever Billboard wrote to cover the entire R&B field (also extending into some jazz here and there). The index shows you which artist, label etc. gets written up where and when in the book so coverage obviously depends on which (indie) label made the (U.S. national) headlines how often. Certainly not 100% comprehensive but a very, very good overview.

These books have been around since the early 90s but unfortunately, it seems, have remained under the radar of many. The R&B/jump&jive/50s rock'n'roll fraternity have jumped on them but not the jazz people, it seems.

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ok i still have no idea what yr talking about? so what are the books like? is it very detalied history of RnB labels?

Hey Chewy,

As Big Beat Steve has indicated the First Pressings series ran eight or nine volumes, format 8.5" x 11" roughly, paperback, no 1940s coverage unfortunately. Published in the late 1980s and early 1990s, now OP sadly, perhaps Gart ran afoul of copyright problems with Billboard which was the source for these books. You can check copies on Amazon, Abebooks, Alibris, etc., some can be had for a reasonable price, but most are five or six times the original price. Sadly many libraries did not pick up these books when they were available. I believe that the UCLA library has most of them available, non-circulating, plus some of Gart's other books. As I recall they also have Billboard on microfilm. Too bad Google offers the issue scans at such a low resolution, hard to read, and they block printing copies.

Speaking of copyright problems, you probably saw the coverage in Billboard where English Decca who had a "Rex" label lodged a lawsuit to block the use of the "Rex" name in the U.S. -- perhaps this was the basis for the name change on the label to "Rex of Hollywood" - just guessing here.

Good luck in finding any Rex 78s out there! Here are some details from Lord's Jazz Discography:

Benny Bailey (tp) Teddy Edwards (ts) Dudley "Duke" Brooks (p) Addison Farmer (b) Roy Porter (d)

Los Angeles, July, 1947

Bird legs Rex 25056

Out of nowhere - -

Roy's boy Rex 25057

Steady with Teddy - -

Rexology Rex 25058

Three bass hit - -

R.B.'s wig Rex 25059

Body and soul - -

Herbie Harper (tb) Teddy Edwards (ts) Hampton Hawes (p) Iggy Shevak (b) Roy Porter (d)

Hollywood, CA, October, 1948

Wonderful work Rex 26025

Teddy's tune - -

Fairy dance Rex 26026

It's the talk of the town (hh out) - -

Jay McShann's Orchestra:

John Anderson (tp) Jewell Grant, Frank Sleets (as) Maxwell Davis, Buddy Floyd (ts) Floyd Turnham (bar) Jay McShann (p) Mitchell "Tiny" Webb (g) Ralph "Chuck" Hamilton (b) Jesse Sailes (d)

Los Angeles, c. mid/late 1950

That's crazy Rex Hollywood 28000

Way out - - -

Jay's blues (part 1) Rex Hollywood 28005

Jay's blues (part 2) - - -

Charles Mingus And His 22 Piece Bebop Band (Stan Kenton's Sideman):

Buddy Childers, John Anderson, Hobart Dotson, Eddie Preston (tp) Britt Woodman, Jimmy Knepper, Marty Smith (tb) poss. 1 or 2 unknown (tp) , Eric Dolphy (as,fl,cl) Art Pepper (as,cl) Herb Caro (ts,cl) William Green (ts,cl,fl) Jewel Grant (as,cl) Gene Porter (bar,cl) Russ Freeman (p) unknown (g), Red Callender (b) Roy Porter (d) Johnny Berger (perc) Charles Mingus (dir,comp)

Hollywood, CA, spring 1949

The story of love (1) Rex Hollywood 28002

Inspiration (pt 1) Rex Hollywood 28014

Inspiration (pt 2) - - -

Roy Porter And His Orchestra:

Art Farmer, Ruben McFall, Robert Ross, Kenny Bright (tp) William Willington, Jimmy Knepper, Danny Horton (tb) Eric Dolphy, Joe Maini (as) Joe Howard, Hadley Caliman (ts) Bob Gordon (bar) Russ Freeman (p) Harold Grant (g,vcl) Addison Farmer (b) Roy Porter (d) Alvy Kidd (cga,bgo,perc)

Los Angeles, spring 1949

Frantic dream Rex Hollywood 28001

Everything's cool - - -

Roy Porter And His Orchestra:

prob. same pers.

Los Angeles, spring 1949

Don't blame me Rex Hollywood 28002

Ray Vasquez

Ray Vasquez And His Be-Boppers:

prob. Ray Vasquez (as) Lucky Thompson (ts) unknown (p), (b), (d)

Los Angeles, c. 1947-1948

Snake den Rex 25099

Clutching hand - -

Jinnie's Packard Rex 26000

Home run - -

Jim

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hey u guys,

so these books are comps of billboard stuff? hmm thats handy but if im gonna go thru all the trouble why not peruse thru the actual billboards, as i guess we can now do online....still cant blieve u can search the pdf file, thats amazing....

Edited by chewy
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JESUS!!!!!!!!!! LOOK AT THIS ONE!!!!!!!!!!!!! CROWN-WEST INDIES DISTRUTION DEAL.... OMFG x 100,000,000,000,000!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

http://books.google.com/books?id=jyIEAAAAM...rds&f=false

SO I TAKE IT BILLBORD IS THE PLACE TO GO FOR OBSCURE RECORD LABEL HISTORY INFO?? I CANT BELIEVE THERE WAS A PRINT OUTLET FOR STUFF LIKE THIS!!!!!!!! I ALWAYS THOUGHT BILLBOARD WAS AN INDUSTRY-PAT ON THE BACK DISH RAG THAT LABEL EXECS USE TO PLAY WITH THEMSELVES IN THE MCA EXCEUTUIVE WASHROOM. BOY WAS I WRONG!!!!!!!!

WIRL was Chris Blackwell's first record label, before he founded Island Records and brought Bob Marley to the world.

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hi, what is that in regards to, is WIRL mentioned in teh crown article?

That's what the article's about, Chewy. WIRL is West Indian Records Ltd. I didn't know Chris Blackwell was involved.

I see this issue is dated 18 July 1964, so the dates confuse me. Blackwell set up Island Records in Jamaica in 1959, then moved the firm to London in 1962. Was Island originally called West Indian Records Ltd? Did Blackwell give WIRL up when he moved to London? Or was he still involved, and using that firm as a source for British Ska issues? Island was issuing Kent/Modern material in Britain on the Sue label around that time - Ike & Tina, Lowell Fulson, Little Richard, but no B B King, that I can remember. I wonder if that was part of the same deal?

MG

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saw a REX item in person i think for the 1st time ever, it was only 8.99 and i didnt buy it. im losing my touch--- well anyways it had a japanese chick on the cover and it was by the 'gilbert & sullivan jazz quintet' and members included if i remember milt bernhart on trombone and i didnt recokonize anyone else. it was a strage record. it was on ANDEX, a division of Rex Productions, Los Angeles

magnificnt goldberg: i had no idea island, or rather blackwells record company dealings dated back so far into the early 60s

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magnificnt goldberg: i had no idea island, or rather blackwells record company dealings dated back so far into the early 60s

Island started off as a Ska/R&B firm - gradually got into rock through Stevie Winwood/Spencer Davis Group and Chris Farlowe (posing as "Little Joe Cook") in 1965. Licensed use of the Sue name for UK in about 1963. Juggy Murray got very pissed off when he found out that Blackwell was issuing stuff from other US indies, as well as his own product, on Sue, so he quit and did a deal with London for UK distribution. But Island still had the Sue name over here.

MG

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