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Thread: Casablanca Records turns 35

  1. #1
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    Casablanca Records turns 35

    http://www.popmatters.com/pm/special...play-it-again/

    Casablanca Records: Play It Again
    By Christian John Wikane

    Friday, August 21 2009

    Part One: Leading the Camel to Water, 1974-1975
    By Christian John Wikane

    Casablanca was not an instant success but Neil Bogart, a dreamer and a doer, was undeterred. Part I examines how the sheik of Casablanca led his camel out of the desert.
    Donna Summer is singing to me: “When I think of home/I think of a place/where there’s love overflowing”. The lyrics to “Home”, Dorothy’s show-stopping number in The Wiz, is Summer’s answer to a word association about Casablanca Records. She punctuates the sweet, five-second serenade with, “That’s what comes to mind. That’s what it was for me, at least in the beginning”. Decades have passed since Donna Summer recorded for Casablanca yet she maintains affection for her time at “The Casbah”.

    The occasion for my conversation with Donna Summer, and more than 50 artists and executives, is the 35th anniversary of Casablanca. It was that many years ago that a little company on Sherbourne Drive in Los Angeles debuted albums by KISS and Parliament. Within just two years, those groups evolved from selling modest amounts of records to selling out arenas, while acts like Angel, Cameo, and Village People dazzled audiences with a potent blend of musical substance and sartorial flair. By the end of the ‘70s, Donna Summer was the top-selling female artist in the U.S. and Casablanca was second only to CBS Records (Columbia) in the number of gold and platinum records its artists acquired over a 12-month period. Not bad for a company that teetered close to bankruptcy within its first year.

    Nothing about Casablanca was predictable, though. Not its impressive array of acts or its extravagant marketing plans. Not its ascent to one of the top record labels of the late-‘70s or the magnitude of its legacy. It is regarded as the quintessential disco label yet a rock band catapulted the company into multi-million dollar profits. A dance record scored the company a platinum, number one pop hit even after DJs led anti-disco rallies. Casablanca was, in a word, unique.

    Ruben Rodriguez would know. As National Promotion and Marketing Director for the label’s satellite office in New York, he contributed to the combination of creativity, intelligence, and perseverance it took to keep the engine of Casablanca running as smoothly as the leased Mercedes Benzes in the company parking lot. “When people talk about Casablanca”, he says, “all they seem to talk about are the limousines and materialism, but I don’t hear enough about the spirit of what the company stood for, the spirit of the artists that were on the label, and the spirit of the people that worked there”.

    That spirit imbues PopMatters’ weeklong celebration of Casablanca. Too much ink has sensationalized the storied past of the label but seldom is the music accorded any true appreciation or meaningful dialogue. From innovative radio and club promotion, to striking album cover designs, the creative forces behind Casablanca excelled in servicing the music. How they did it and the artists they did it for is the foundation of Casablanca: Play It Again.

    “My granddaughter should listen to this”, Bernie Worrell says suddenly while revisiting his days with Parliament-Funkadelic. “She’s older now but she needs to hear this”, the former P-Funk music director says, underscoring the importance of preserving the musical history of Casablanca. The resonance of his words is significant since so few albums from the label’s discography remain widely available and the outlets to procure them dwindle with each passing day. Until Universal Music, which owns the Casablanca catalog, sees fit to re-release everything from Fanny to Frankie Crocker and The Heart & Soul Orchestra, a fair amount of excavation in used-record store bins is required for curious ears to hear why Casablanca still matters. (Industry impresario Tommy Mottola re-activated the Casablanca imprint in recent years with releases by Lindsey Lohan, Mika, and Ryan Leslie but the label’s classic catalog falls outside his domain.)

    The individual responsible for influencing three generations of music listeners, and creating an eclectic soundtrack for hip-hop masters, head-bangers, and hustle champions alike, is the late Neil Bogart. To quote Bruce Sudano, who recorded on Casablanca as a member of Brooklyn Dreams, Bogart never saw “No”. His genius allowed gay archetypes, teen idols, comic book characters, flamenco dancers, Ronald McDonald, and Cher to cohabitate on one record label. His boundless vision brought records into supermarkets 35 years before Wal-Mart signed a distribution deal with The Eagles. He spared no expense in granting his artists and producers the latest recording technology to experiment with in the studio, even across continents. He inspired his promotion and marketing teams to be limitless in their thinking: only at a Casablanca party would you find a live camel standing outside a club on a New York City sidewalk. He was, as many people attest on these pages, the P.T. Barnum of the music business.

    Casablanca: Play It Again is as much a salute to Neil Bogart as it is to his label’s music. From the words and memories of artists and executives who were there, this is the story of a record company that believed in the business of show as much as supporting the artistry of its individual acts. Step through the gates of Bogart’s Café Americana, pet the stuffed camel, and experience the sound of 33 1/3 revolutions per minute, Casbah-style.

    —Christian John Wikane
    Part Five: Defining the Legacy
    By Christian John Wikane

    The sale to PolyGram, the death of Neil Bogart -- the dawn of the 1980s signaled the end of an era for Casablanca. Three decades since the label's fearless leader last stood inside the Casbah, artists and executives explain his genius and define the legacy of the label.


    Curatorial Casablanca
    By Christian John Wikane

    You know KISS and Donna Summer but what about Platypus and Gloria Scott? Herewith, a guide to underappreciated gems from the Casablanca catalog.

    Thursday, August 20 2009

    Part Four: Dancing on the Pinnacle: 1978-1979
    By Christian John Wikane

    Between 1978 and 1979, Casablanca could do no wrong.Trailing just behind CBS Records, Casablanca was the most successful record company in the U.S. Its artists gathered Oscar wins, number one albums, Grammy Awards, and even more platinum and gold discs.

    Wednesday, August 19 2009

    Part Three: Pushing the Envelope, 1977-1978
    By Christian John Wikane

    PolyGram, a group of "macho men", and Star Wars bolstered Casablanca at retail, on radio, and in the clubs. While expanding the roster and its partnerships, the label also landed its first number one single.

    Tuesday, August 18 2009

    Part Two: Painting the Building, 1975-1977
    By Christian John Wikane

    KISS came "Alive" in 1975. So did Parliament and Donna Summer. In a dramatic reversal of its uncertain beginnings, Casablanca cultivated a colony of successful acts and expanded its reach with boutique labels and partnerships in the film industry.

    Monday, August 17 2009
    "The weak can never forgive. Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong." -Mahatma Gandhi

  2. #2

    Wink

    D.C LaRue was the first L.P released by Casablanca..is that correct? I still have all my Casablanca releases,love em for the fact that some were as long as 17min(piss,drink,a quickie,a fix,a drink and a dance)...lol
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    They released a lot more one-sided 12's than any other label I can think of. Among the pretty shlocky stuff, they had some real gems.
    Member # 37.

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    one of my all time favorites... and anything from donna summer during that time period.....

    pt 1



    pt2

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    Quote Originally Posted by dekmusic View Post
    one of my all time favorites... and anything from donna summer during that time period.....

    pt 1



    pt2
    Loved that LP they have the Ultimate catalog!
    Wasn't Love & Kisses before DC LaRue? I think DC's first cut was on Pyramid records.

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    Casablanca Records turns 35

    I remember plates like, 'Funky Town, By Lipps Inc, And, 'Get on the Funk Train', By Munich Machine, On the Cassablanca label during the mid to late 70's(Along with the Ritchie Family), Sammy, Didn't, 'Cathedrals', By DC La-Rue, Come out in 1976(Along with, 'I love

    America', By Patrick Juvet, 'Romeo And Juliet', By Alec R. Costandinos, I remember The Sylvers making plates on the Cassablanca label during the late 70's/early 80's too.

    Much Respect
    Mike Barnes

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    Quote Originally Posted by Mike Barnes View Post
    I remember plates like, 'Funky Town, By Lipps Inc, And, 'Get on the Funk Train', By Munich Machine, On the Cassablanca label during the mid to late 70's(Along with the Ritchie Family), Sammy, Didn't, 'Cathedrals', By DC La-Rue, Come out in 1976(Along with, 'I love

    America', By Patrick Juvet, 'Romeo And Juliet', By Alec R. Costandinos, I remember The Sylvers making plates on the Cassablanca label during the late 70's/early 80's too.

    Much Respect
    Mike Barnes
    I stated earlier Mike that Catherdrals came out on Pyramid. Was I Love America on Casablanca? I don't remember. I remember From Here to Eternity by Giorgio! Romeo & Juliet was cool stuff!
    How about that Gawd awful Thank God its Friday movie and soundtrack?The only blight in my eye on the Casablanca legacy

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    Quote Originally Posted by DaBownca View Post
    Loved that LP they have the Ultimate catalog!
    Wasn't Love & Kisses before DC LaRue? I think DC's first cut was on Pyramid records.
    here ya go DaBownca



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    Casablanca Records turns 35

    Chuck, I'm sorry i missed your earlier thread, In regards to DC LaRue, My man), Chuck, 'I Love America', By Patrick Juvet, Came out on the Cassablanca label in 1976 or 1977(My man used to run, 'I love America', Mad hard during the mid/late 70's with, 'Sure can't go to

    The moon', By Cj and Company/LOL), Chuck, 'Romeo and Juliet', Was mad long(Like, 'Trans-Europe Express', by Kraftwerk/LOL), Also, The, 'Thankgod it's Friday', Soundtrack was mad Wack(At least to me/LOL).

    Much respect
    Mike Barnes

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    Quote Originally Posted by DaBownca View Post
    I stated earlier Mike that Catherdrals came out on Pyramid. Was I Love America on Casablanca? I don't remember. I remember From Here to Eternity by Giorgio! Romeo & Juliet was cool stuff!
    How about that Gawd awful Thank God its Friday movie and soundtrack?The only blight in my eye on the Casablanca legacy
    it sure was ....



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    Quote Originally Posted by dekmusic View Post
    here ya go DaBownca


    One of the best album covers EVER! I also remember playing this and at the bass break the crowd chanting "Ain't gon' take no bullshit!'

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    Is it Ruben Rodriguez (who is mentioned above) who is handling the Casablanca catalog today ?
    Anyone here have any contact details for Casablanca now ?

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    casablanca also put out one of the first full fledged gospel dance albumes with roberta kelly designed with disco dancing in mind..... she also did the zodiacs song




    and of course patti brooks After Dark .....

    Last edited by dekmusic; 08-25-2009 at 11:54 AM.

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    Quote Originally Posted by dekmusic View Post
    casablanca also put out one of the first full fledged gospel dance albumes with roberta kelly designed with disco dancing in mind..... she also did the zodiacs song


    Of course i have to mention Trouble maker wasn't that album on Island and was Island affiliated w/Casablanca then?

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    Quote Originally Posted by DaBownca View Post
    Of course i have to mention Trouble maker wasn't that album on Island and was Island affiliated w/Casablanca then?

    I don't remember roberta kelly being on island records , it may have been another artist , her version of trouble maker came out on casablanca ... i was a casablanca fiend and loved what i considered the long epic lps......

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    Quote Originally Posted by dekmusic View Post
    I don't remember roberta kelly being on island records , it may have been another artist , her version of trouble maker came out on casablanca ... i was a casablanca fiend and loved what i considered the long epic lps......
    Then Island was affiliated with casablanca because my LP Truble maker was definitely on Island I wonder if the cover was the same.....Face photo with the greay smile and afro?

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    "There are no uninteresting things, only uninterested people."

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    8 pages of Casablanca/Oasis/Chocolate City Vinyl here :
    with various releases from 1976 untill 1983 (all with loonngg listen portions
    http://www.vjsinc.com/rare-vinyl/search/casablanca.html

    would like contact info for who is handling Casablanca today, if anyone here can help.
    Last edited by DEEPHOUSEHEAD; 08-25-2009 at 02:33 PM.

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    Much as I love Casablanca for it's Disco releases. I gotta say my first fanatical love for music was because of Parliament, Parliament, Parliament! True Old schoolers, remember when they aired the Sir-Nose, funkentelecky cartoon(commercial), during the TV premiere of 'Thank God, it's Friday'?

    Mothership Connection started it all, for me.

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    Quote Originally Posted by DEEPHOUSEHEAD View Post
    8 pages of Casablanca/Oasis/Chocolate City Vinyl here :
    with various releases from 1976 untill 1983 (all with loonngg listen portions
    http://www.vjsinc.com/rare-vinyl/search/casablanca.html

    would like contact info for who is handling Casablanca today, if anyone here can help.
    OASIS! That was what I had Roberta Kelly on i knew it was something with a Palm Tree

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    There were some great 12's on the Chocolate City spinoff label. Tilt by Seventh Wonder and some great Starpoint tracks come to mind.


    Quote Originally Posted by TAB. View Post
    Much as I love Casablanca for it's Disco releases. I gotta say my first fanatical love for music was because of Parliament, Parliament, Parliament! True Old schoolers, remember when they aired the Sir-Nose, funkentelecky cartoon(commercial), during the TV premiere of 'Thank God, it's Friday'?

    Mothership Connection started it all, for me.
    Member # 37.

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    This LP was as manditory back in the day.


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