Jerry Blaine
Jerry Blaine (December 31, 1910 – March 14, 1973) was a bandleader, label owner, record distributor, and singer who recorded 18 sides for the Master and Bluebird labels in 1937-1938.
Biography
He was born in Allenwood, New Jersey on December 31, 1910. In May 1946 Herb Abramson founded Jubilee Records and asked Jerry Blaine to become his business partner. In September 1947, Abramson had Blaine buy him out and Blaine became the sole proprietor of Jubilee. Jubilee's first hit record was in 1948 with the Orioles' song "It's Too Soon To Know" (# 1 R&B, # 14 pop). The song was originally issued on Blaine's It's a Natural label. The label also released risque comedy records and Kermit Schafer's blooper recordings.
Blaine's largest money maker was his record distribution company, Cosnat Distributing.
During Alan Freed's payola trial of February 4, 1960, Blaine was implicated in paying to have his music played on the radio.
Jubilee was sold to Viewlex in 1970 and Blaine left the company. He agreed to serve as a consultant to Viewlex for a year.[1]
The master tapes were eventually sold to Roulette Records. Morris Levy sold Roulette to Rhino Records in the late 1980s.
Jerry Blaine died from a heart attack in 1973[2] in Nassau, New York.
Jerry Blaine Orchestra in 1937
- Carl Frederick Tandberg, bass
- George Schmidt, trumpet
- Buddy Pottle, trumpet
- Fred Train, trumpet
- Nat Lobovsky, trombone
- Tony Antonelli, Abe Markowitz, Harry Roberts, and Irving Broucke, saxophones
- Jack Matthias, piano
- Joel Livingston, guitar
- Eddie Ross, drums
- Phyllis Kenny, Johnny McKeever, and Jerry Blaine, vocals
References
- John A. Jackson's; Big Beat Heat: Alan Freed and the Early Years of Rock & Roll (1991)
- ↑ "Blaine Exits as Jubilee Chief". Billboard magazine. June 20, 1970. Retrieved 2011-11-18.
- ↑ Nick Talevski (2010-04-07). "Jerry Blaine". Knocking on Heaven's Door: Rock Obituaries. ISBN 9780857121172. Retrieved 2011-11-18.