[Table of Contents]


[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: [ARSCLIST] Soviet Recordings - MK



MK was the Russian state publishing house. It did paper and records. The woman who headed it was the only female member of the Politburo, if memory serves. I don't recall her name at the moment. Records they administered were marketed under various names, both within and extranal to the Soviet Union. The same record under different labels often included the name of the pressing plant as part of the label design- remember, the USSR covered 11 time zones.

The jacket smell was usually fish glue. When I worked at Leeds, the room with the Soviet printed music had a distinct odor.

The Artia MKs were pressed in the US under license.

The material was copyright-free until the Russians joined the international agreement covering this right- I don't remember the year. Though many issues were dubbed, one had to pay to get use of the master tape copies. Those I handled were on the Telefunken-type rich orange tape which shed powder as it played. They were equalized strangely and some of the lousy sounding issues from these tapes were because the mastering facility didn't have the proper eq or, in some cases, even have been aware it needed it. Some came in "B" wound.

Steve Smolian


----- Original Message ----- From: "Punto" <punto@xxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, November 14, 2007 1:10 AM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Soviet Recordings - MK



Where in the scheme of things does MK (Mezhdurodnaya Kniga?) fit in? I have seen a number of discs on this label, but don't know if it is related in some way to Melodiya or not. I think I saw some that were MK - Artia and there was some western label or labels that licensed MK material.

I am finding that this thread is stoking my nostalgia. I used to haunt the Four Continents and treasure those LPs housed in thin, flimsy, unglossy cardboard which even had a distinctive vegetative odor that they emitted (anyone else ever notice this or is it just me?). I snatched up discs devoted to Levko Kolodub and Murad Kazhlayev and the like largely because I couldn't possibly resist the allure of the names themselves.

Peter Hirsch

Tom Fine wrote:
Here's one:
http://www.musicdirect.com/product/78137

----- Original Message ----- From: "Natalie Zelensky" <nzelensky@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2007 11:09 AM
Subject: [ARSCLIST] Soviet Recordings



Hello,


I am trying to gather information on the early distribution of Soviet recordings in the US.

1. What was the first recording of Soviet songs that was released in the US? (year?; label? contents?)

2. I also am trying to find more information regarding subsequent distribution of recordings of Soviet songs in the US. (Labels?; History?; Would the companies simply copy from eachother and resell under their respective labels?). Based on my research in American and Russian-American papers, it appears that Stinson and the "Am-Rus Music Corporation" were the first distributors of these records - is this true? Does anyone know anything else about this "Am-Rus" company?

3. Could anyone tell me more about the "World's Fair" recording. (Year?; Contents?; Performers?).

4. Does anyone have any suggestions for sources about early Soviet recordigs in the US?

Thank you very much.

N. Zelensky
_________________________________________________________________
Windows Live Hotmail and Microsoft Office Outlook – together at last. Get it now.
http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/outlook/HA102225181033.aspx?pid=CL100626971033




--
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.5.503 / Virus Database: 269.15.31/1129 - Release Date: 11/13/2007 9:22 PM





[Subject index] [Index for current month] [Table of Contents]