Festival Records

Festival Records

Sub-label of Festival Records Pty. Ltd.

100 releases 14 sub-labels 1954–2017

About

Australian (and New Zealand) record label — also appears as "Festival" only. PLEASE NOTE: This entity should only be used as a label when the release displays the Festival Records logo. For releases on international labels (e.g. Island Records, A&M Records, etc. — see '') that don't include a Festival logo, but were distributed by either or , please use the appropriate international label pages — not this one. Festival Records Pty. Ltd. was formed in Australia in 1952. It was a primarily a record distribution company representing overseas labels such as Atlantic, Chrysalis, Island, A&M Records, and Virgin. In effect it created de-facto joint venture partnerships with many of the labels it represented and licensed labels rather than acts. Festival Records Pty. Ltd. also distributed many independent Australian labels over the years. In New Zealand, the Festival labels were distributed by G.A. Wooller & Co. Ltd from 1952 until 1966. In 1966 Festival Records (NZ) Ltd. was created as a joint partnership between Festival Records (Pty.) Ltd and NZ cinema chain Kerridge Odeon. It operated as a standalone independent entity, albeit one with a close operating relationship, to the Australian entity, until 1999. In 1999 Rupert Murdoch's Newscorp bought out its partners in NZ and amalgamated Festival Records (NZ) Ltd, Festival Records Pty Ltd, Mushroom Records Pty Ltd and Mushroom Distribution Services (MDS) as Festival Mushroom Records. In 2012 the new owners, Warner Music Group, revived Festival Records as a reissue label. For the "Festival" location where such things as the tags 'Recorded At' or 'Mastered At' apply either for recordings on this label or for recordings that credit either of the respective Festival companies (Festival Records Pty. Ltd or Festival Records (NZ) Ltd.), please use Festival Studios. For publishing credits ("Published By"), please use Festival Music Publishing or Festival (17). Catalogue numbers: From 1961 the Festival companies introduced a fairly rigid cataloguing system: Each licensed label had a letter, these included AM (A&M), A (Atlantic), D (Decca), I (Island), LY (Liberty) and so on. Festival branded releases used F. This sat to the left of the format letter. These were K (single), X (EP, later 12"), C (Cassette from the late 1960s) and L (Long player). D was introduced for CDs in the 1980s. To the left of the label code was an S if it was stereo. To the right of the letters were numbers. Singles had numbers under 10,000. EPs and 12" singles were between 10001 and 20000. All others were in sequences above that. Until the end of 1972 stereo LPs had a 9 before the numerical sequence, mono did not. Thus 'SAML-932,101' was a stereo LP from A&M. 'AML-32,101' was the mono version. In 1973 the system was simplified. Mono was largely gone so the S and the 9 were removed so that 'SAML932,101' would become 'AML-32101' (the commas were also dropped). Singles were still 'AMK-3055' etc. In late 1973 the label code was also dropped so all LPs were L (that 'AML-32101' was now 'L32101'), cassettes were C, EPs and 12"s just X, and singles K (that single would be 'K-3055'). With one major exception (RML - Festival Retail Marketing) that was the system that survived until 1999. Other known Festival Records Pty. Ltd related companies: - Festival Manufacturing Pty. Ltd. - Festival Records Retail Marketing (applies across both territories of Australia & New Zealand) - Festival Records (NZ) Ltd. NZ company as above. - Festival Records Retail Marketing Division (Australian-specific company) - Festival Records Retail Marketing Ltd. (NZ-specific company) - Festival Records International Ltd. (UK-based, international division of the Festival Records Pty. Ltd. parent company) - Festival Art (artist-entry, not a company-entry — the in-house art department, with it's common ANV being Festival Art Dept. = a2413812 ).

Links

Top Festival Records Releases

The Queen Is Dead
The Queen Is Dead
The Smiths
1986
Reckless
Reckless
Bryan Adams
1984
The Smiths
The Smiths
The Smiths
1984
Garbage
Garbage
Garbage
1995
The Ultimate Collection
The Ultimate Collection
Creedence Clearwater Revival
1997
Boy
Boy
U2
1980
Reverence
Reverence
Faithless
1996
20 Golden Greats
Creedence Clearwater Revival
1979
The Rocky Horror Picture Show
Richard O’Brien
1975
Apostrophe (’)
Frank Zappa
1974
Sheik Yerbouti
Sheik Yerbouti
Frank Zappa
1979
A Flock of Seagulls
A Flock of Seagulls
A Flock of Seagulls
1982
Sunday 8pm
Sunday 8pm
Faithless
1998
Keep On Chooglin’
Creedence Clearwater Revival
1995
Once More Into the Bleach
Once More Into the Bleach
Debbie Harry / Blondie
1988
Rhythm of Love
Rhythm of Love
Kylie Minogue
1990
High Fidelity
Various Artists
1999
Good
Morphine
1992
Hit Machine 12
Various Artists
1996
I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles)
The Proclaimers
1988
i Megaphone
i Megaphone
Imogen Heap
1998
Like Swimming
Morphine
1996
Hit Machine 6
Hit Machine 6
Various Artists
1994
Listen
Listen
A Flock of Seagulls
1983
Star Trek: First Contact
Star Trek: First Contact
Jerry Goldsmith
1996
Catch Bull at Four
Catch Bull at Four
Cat Stevens
1972
Bummed
Bummed
Happy Mondays
1988
Hallowed Ground
Violent Femmes
1984
1986 Out Now
Various Artists
1985
Can’t Touch This
Various Artists
1990
YAORcht Rock
Various Artists
2014
Hit Machine, Volume 3
Various Artists
1993
I Can't Explain
I Can't Explain
The Who
1965
Big Hits
Various Artists
1989
Silence
Silence
Delerium feat. Sarah McLachlan
1997
Physical
Physical
Olivia Newton‐John
1981
The Best
The Best
Tina Turner
1989
30 Something
Carter the Unstoppable Sex Machine
1991
signed, sealed, deLIVID
Various Artists
1998
Hit Pix ’88
Various Artists
1988
Brenda Lee
Brenda Lee
Brenda Lee
1960
The Missing Piece
Gentle Giant
1977
Panic
The Smiths
1986
Flying Colours
Flying Colours
Chris de Burgh
1988
No 1 Dance Hits of the 90's
Various Artists
1994
60 Second Wipe Out
60 Second Wipe Out
Atari Teenage Riot
1999
Hit City 1987
Various Artists
1987
Join Hands
Join Hands
Siouxsie and the Banshees
1979
Vehicle
Vehicle
The Clean
1990
Between the Lines
Janis Ian
1975
Good Humor
Good Humor
Saint Etienne
1998
Stop!
Stop!
Sam Brown
1988
Take 40: Hit Machine 23
Various Artists
1999
The Singles
The Singles
Olivia Newton‐John
1992
Hottest On Record
Various Artists
1985
Electronic Pleasure
Electronic Pleasure
N‐Trance
1995
Emotions
Emotions
Brenda Lee
1961
Democracy
Killing Joke
1996
Furious Angels
Furious Angels
Rob Dougan
1998
1991: The Gun Hits
Various Artists
1990
Hit Machine, Volume 8
Various Artists
1995
Let Me Be There
Let Me Be There
Olivia Newton‐John
1973
Choose 1985
Various Artists
1984
I Ran
I Ran
A Flock of Seagulls
1982
The Healer
The Healer
John Lee Hooker
1989
That’ll Be the Day
That’ll Be the Day
Buddy Holly
1958
... "Let Me Sing"
... "Let Me Sing"
Brenda Lee
1963
The Lonely Bull
Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass
1962
1982 … in the Sun
Various Artists
1982
The New Age
The New Age
Canned Heat
1973
Hit Machine 9
Various Artists
1995
Killjoy
Killjoy
Shihad
1995
Hits of ’89, Volume 1
Various Artists
1989
Hit Machine 15
Various Artists
1996

Festival Records Artist Roster

Various Artists
Various Artists
93 releases
Other
JW
John Williamson
23 releases
Person
RE
Rob E.G.
22 releases
Person
Olivia Newton‐John
Olivia Newton‐John
12 releases
Person
Brenda Lee
Brenda Lee
12 releases
Person
Patsy Cline
Patsy Cline
11 releases
Person
H
Hard‐Ons
10 releases
Group
S
Sherbet
10 releases
Group
Faithless
Faithless
9 releases
Group
Col Joye
Col Joye
7 releases
Person
Bee Gees
Bee Gees
6 releases
Group
SL
Sven Libæk
6 releases
Person
Gentle Giant
Gentle Giant
6 releases
Group
The Smiths
The Smiths
5 releases
Group
Jimmy Little
Jimmy Little
5 releases
Person
N‐Trance
N‐Trance
5 releases
Group
BR
Bruce Rowland
5 releases
Group

Sub-labels

In Store Video

A series of in-store and club promotional videos produced by or in Australia on VHS video cassettes, around 1989 to 1991.

Now That's What I Call Big

Promo compilation series by Festival Records.

Spin Records Pty. Ltd.

Vital (10)

Australian Series associated with the label Manufactured and distributed by

A Child's First Record

Infinity

Subsidiary label of the Australian Festival Records label created in January 1971. Please use Infinity Records (22) or Infinity Records Inc. (2) for company credits.

Interfusion

Interfusion was a label of the Festival Records group created in 1970 as in-house label to be used when for non-labeled licensed product or releases that otherwise did not fit on other imprints in ...

The Greasy Record Company

The Greasy Record Company was a sub-label of Festival Records used to distribute acts on . Could sometimes appear as "The Greasy Records Company".

Linda Lee

Linda Lee was a short lived, small independent label distributed by Australia's largest independent, Festival Records. Their roster included Aztecs who after enjoying a minor hit with their 2nd re...

Festival Jazz Heritage Series

Australia and New Zealand version of the US Decca Jazz Heritage Series, renamed because US Decca releases were released on the Festival Records label until 1969, as the Decca name was c...

Rex (6)

Short-lived Australian label based in Sydney, formed 1959 and closed June 1962. Created as a sub-label of Festival Records to feature the new Australian stars of the 1960s.

Celebrity Cavalcade Collectors Series

Festival Custom Recording

Australia The Subsidiary of Festival Records for custom recording and pressing. They used MX or SMX prefix on catalogue no. that used as Matrix no. for Festival Records and Infinity Records.

Australian Festival Of Music

A series of ten vinyl LPs featuring the music of Australian composers, artists and orchestras, recorded by the ABC and released by Festival Records in 1972. The initial releases were in elaborate g...

Contact Label

[obsolete] 63-79 Miller Street Pyrmont, New South Wales Australia 2009 Ph: +61 2 660 4022 Telex: AA25686