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All Platinum Records

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(Redirected from Stang Records)
All Platinum Records
Company typeThereto
Industryrecord label
Founded1967
United States
FounderSylvia Robinson
Joe Robinson
FateActive
Tax Dormitory [citation needed]
HeadquartersUnited States
Total assetsUS$6.6million
ParentWMG (1985-present)
UMG (1985-present)
DMG (1985-present)

All Platinum Records was a record company started in 1967 by singer/writer/producer Sylvia Robinson and her husband, businessman Joe Robinson, who had previously worked in the recording industry.

All Platinum and its subsidiary labels, including Stang, Vibration, Turbo and Astroscope, specialized in soul and R&B music. Many of the company's releases were recorded at its Soul Sound Studios, using the company's in-house musicians, at its Englewood, New Jersey base. The company released four singles that reached number one on the Billboard R&B chart but failed to top the Hot 100 pop chart.

Background

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The label started as Platinum Records but the prefix of 'All' was added to avoid confusion with a Miami label. The company, with Sylvia helming the creative operations as well as producing or co-producing many releases, racked up a series of R&B and Pop hits during the 70s, despite being only a small independent concern.

The company's mainstay act was the all-male group, The Moments (later Ray, Goodman & Brown) whose first hit at the end of 1968 launched the Stang label, "Not On The Outside" (#13 Billboard R&B, #57 pop). The group, with a few early personnel changes, stayed with the company for ten years, resulting in over 25 R&B hits and 15 Hot 100 entries. These included the million-seller, "Love on a Two-Way Street" in 1970 (#1 R&B, #3 pop) and another R&B chart-topper, "Look at Me (I'm in Love)", which also reached #39 on the pop chart in 1975. The group's Harry Ray and Al Goodman branched out as writers and producers in their later years at the company.

Other major hits for the All-Platinum labels included Sylvia's own million-selling "Pillow Talk" in 1973 (#1 R&B, #3 pop); Shirley & Company's "Shame, Shame, Shame" in 1975 (#1 R&B, #12 pop); Donnie Elbert's version of "Where Did Our Love Go" in 1971 (#6 R&B, #15 pop); Brother To Brother's "In The Bottle" in 1974 (#9 R&B, #46 pop); Linda Jones' "Your Precious Love" in 1972 (#15 R&B, #74 pop); and The Whatnauts' 1971 hit, "I'll Erase Away Your Pain" (#14 R&B, #71 pop).

The Moments also had considerable success in the UK with three Top 10 hits including "Girls" (#3) in 1975 and All Platinum also had its own label in the UK for a few years during the mid-1970s. [citation needed]

History

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In 1971, the label was handling the distribution for Maple Records. One record was the Two Great Experiences Together! album by Jimi Hendrix & Lonnie Youngblood which made the Billboard Top LPs chart.[1][2]

A group called Calender had a single "Hypertension" released on All Platinum 6146 308 in the UK.[3] Making its first appearance in the Record Mirror UK disco chart on August 9, 1975 "Hypertension" got to no. 10, spending a total of four weeks in the chart.[4] It made it into the Cash Box R&B chart, peaking at no. 94 on August 30,[5][6] spending a total of four weeks in the chart.[7][6][8] It also made the Billboard Soul chart in 1975.[9]

Retta Young had a hit with "Sending Out An S.O.S." which made its debut in the UK chart at no. 50.[10] It peaked at no. 28 at the end of June,[11][12] spending a total of seven weeks in the chart.[13]

All Platinum purchased Chess Records with assistance from the European record concern, PolyGram in 1975, after Chess fell into bankruptcy. However, the move was not a success as All Platinum was unable to keep steadily releasing material from Chess's roster of artists.[14]

The Robinsons launched a new subsidiary label, Sugar Hill Records in 1979 to concentrate on the fast-emerging rap/hip hop music scene. Sylvia switched her efforts to the new label completely, following early major success with "Rapper's Delight" (1979) and then "The Message" (1982), as the company's other labels went quiet. Sugar Hill as a label came to an end in 1986 after a disagreement with distributors MCA resulted in protracted litigation. [citation needed]

Later years

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The Robinsons maintained their studio operation through to 2002 when the Englewood studios (by then, renamed Sugar Hill Studios) burned down in a fire. Joe Robinson had died two years earlier and then Sylvia died in hospital in 2011 at the age of 75.[citation needed]

Artists

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Billboard, January 16, 1971 - Page 36 Soul, Soul Sauce by ED OCHS
  2. ^ Billboard, April 10, 1971 - Page 44 Billboard TOP LPs * Continued from page 62
  3. ^ Amazon UK - Calender - Hypertension (Part 1) - All Platinum - 6146 308
  4. ^ James Hamilton's Disco Page - A full list of all Record Mirror UK Disco Chart entries, 1975-1979, Calendar, Hypertension (All Platinum) — 9 August 1975: 10, 4
  5. ^ Cash Box, August 30, 1975 - Page 19 CASH BOX TOP 100 R&B, 94 HYPERTENSION Calendars (Buddah BDA 4881 95
  6. ^ a b Cash Box, September 6, 1975 - Page 26 CASH BOX TOP 100 R&B, 96 HYPERTENSION Calendars (Buddah BDA 488) 94
  7. ^ Cash Box, August 16, 1975 - Page 37 CASH BOX TOP 100 R&B, 98 HYPERTENSION, ON Calendars (Buddah BDA 488 _
  8. ^ Cash Box, September 13, 1975 - Page 28 CASH BOX TOP 100 R&B
  9. ^ Billboard, October 23, 1976 - Page 87 Billboard's Recommended LPs * Continued front page 84
  10. ^ Billboard, May 31, 1975 - Page 73 Billboard Hits Of The World, BRITAIN
  11. ^ Billboard, July 5, 1975 - Page 57 Billboard Hits Of The World, BRITAIN
  12. ^ MusicVF.com - Sending Out an S.O.S. By: Retta Young
  13. ^ Official Charts - https://www.officialcharts.com/search/singles/(sending-out-an)-s.o.s_dot_/ OFFICIAL SINGLES CHART RESULTS MATCHING: (SENDING OUT AN) S.O.S.
  14. ^ Review of Deep in the Night by Etta James[dead link]. Rolling Stone, June 1, 1978.
  15. ^ "Pearl Box Revue". www.queermusicheritage.com. Retrieved 2023-05-02.