American record label
Record label
Accent Records Accent 78rpm label from 1954
Founded 1954 (1954 ) Status Defunct Genre Jazz , traditional pop , country Country of origin U.S. Location Hollywood, California
Accent Records was a Hollywood-based[ 1] [ 2] record label formed in 1954. Scott Seely was the president. Nick Lucas signed to the label in 1955 and made his final recording for them in 1980.[ 3] Previously releasing only singles, Accent's first LP record, an album by Drew Page, was released in 1956.[ 4]
1966 saw GNP Crescendo make a marketing, packaging, and distribution deal with Accent for Buddy Merrill 's guitar albums,[ 5] following a tip that Merrill's recordings were selling well as a result of in-store plays.[ 6]
In 1967 Accent made the decision to focus on country music .[ 2]
The label promoted a self-learn course for pop singers in 1971.[ 7]
Seely remained president until at least 2006.[ 8] Accent Records owned the Boomerang Music and S&R Music publishing companies.[ 2]
Accent LP label from 1976
^ a b "Music as Written" . Billboard . May 15, 1954. p. 19.
^ a b c "Nashville Scene" . Nielsen Business Media. 19 August 1967. pp. 53–.
^ a b Pitts, Michael; Hoffmann, Frank; Carty, Dick; Bedoian, Jim (2001). The Rise of the Crooners: Gene Austin, Russ Columbo, Bing Crosby, Nick Lucas, Johnny Marvin and Rudy Vallee . Scarecrow Press. p. 155. ISBN 9781461707127 .
^ Page, Drew (1 March 1999). The Ha-ha: Poems . LSU Press. pp. 172–. ISBN 978-0-8071-2496-3 .
^ "Talent: Signings" . Nielsen Business Media, Inc. 18 June 1966. pp. 48–.
^ "From the Music Capitals of the World" . Nielsen Business Media. 5 February 1966. pp. 41–.
^ "Accent Pop Vocal Course" . Nielsen Business Media. 4 December 1971. pp. 25–.
^ Brobston, Stanley Heard (2006). "Daddy Sang Lead: The History and Performance Practice of White Southern Gospel Music" . Vantage Press. pp. 422–. ISBN 978-0-533-15353-4 .
^ "Music As Written" . Billboard . July 6, 1963. p. 25.
^ a b "Music as Written" . Billboard . December 3, 1955. p. 19.
^ Friedman, Joel (April 17, 1954). "Folk Talent and Tunes" . Billboard . p. 27.
^ a b c d e "Accent (2)" . Discogs . Retrieved 2017-05-22 .