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Concert Hall

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Multinational label. [l=Concert Hall Society, Inc.] was a record club founded in 1946. The company originally announced that it would turn out only 2,000 copies of its albums, cutting directly from "masters" and thus eliminating the "mother" and "stamper" discs used for mass production of commercial records. This policy was only maintained during the first few years, however, and Concert Hall quite rapidly evolved into a budget label for classical music, often operating as a record sales club in various countries. Releases were available only to members. President of Concert Hall was Dr. [a850067]. Concert Hall didn't have a pressing plant of its own but had its releases - and those of its various sub-labels - pressed by various pressing plants and then distributed all across the US, Canada and Europe. There were also releases for the Japanese market. Some plants can be identified by 1 or 2 letters on the labels: AH = [l=Artone Holland] P = [l=Philips Phonografische Industrie] or [l=Phonodisc B.V.] D, M = unknown PE = [l=Philips Records Ltd.] (Philips England) TU = [l=Turicaphon AG] Some other plants can only be detected in the runouts: ARC = [l=Allentown Record Co. Inc.] I = [l=RCA Records Pressing Plant, Indianapolis] M1, M3, M6 = [l=Pathé Marconi, Chatou] R = [l=RCA Records Pressing Plant, Rockaway] TU = [l=Turicaphon AG] Codes such as "F8OL-4513" or "E 3 K U 5586" on the labels and/or runouts would mean a mastering by an RCA Victor studio (see [url=https://www.discogs.com/forum/thread/694503]here[/url] for complete reference). Codes such as "EB-xxxx" (e.g. EB-2287) or "GB-xxx" (e.g. GB-288) on the labels and/or runouts would mean Manufactured By [l=Capitol Custom].

Contact

1st German address: Concert Hall GmbH Grüneburgweg 9 Frankfurt am Main Germany 2nd German address: Concert Hall GmbH Myliusstrasse 50 Frankfurt/M. Germany

Links

http://www.soundfountain.com/concert-hall/concerthall.html

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concert_Hall_Society

By Kyle Larson