MOTOWN MOVES INTO OWN CASSETTE TAPE OPERATION . . . SEPTEMBER 6, 1969

Motor City Radio Flashbacks logoFrom the MCRFB news archives: 1969

 

 

 

 

 

 

DETROIT — Motown Records is moving into its own cassette tape operation, including packaging, merchandising, and distribution, beginning Monday, September 1.

Motown Records and Tapes
The new Motown Records and Tapes

RCA will duplicate Motown’s new cassette product, with Ampex, the previous cassette licensee, duplicating only reel-to-reel. Muntz Stereo-Pak will continue to duplicate Motown’s 4-track.

Motown’s initial cassette release under its own banner will be culled from catalog material. A fall production will emphasize new product.

The company will sell cassettes a $6.95, the same price as it’s 8-tracks, which it also markets and distributes.

Mel DaKroob, Motown national tape and album sales manager, said the increased emphasis on tape product is paying off. He feels 8-track sales this year will hit 3 million units. At the end of the first six-months of 1969, Motown’s 8-track sales increased 120 per cent over the same period in 1968. END

(Information and news source: Billboard; September 6, 1969).

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’61 MOTOWN SNAPSHOT FLASHBACK! EDDIE HOLLAND

Motown-Record-MCRFB-Logo-1

EDDIE HOLLAND circa 1961
EDDIE HOLLAND circa 1961
EDDIE HOLLAND MOTOWN LP, 1962
EDDIE HOLLAND’S debut Motown LP, 1962
BRIAN HOLLAND, LAMONT DOZIER, EDDIE HOLLAND. H-D-H penned many of Motown's hit makers in the early, mid-1960s.
BRIAN HOLLAND, LAMONT DOZIER, EDDIE HOLLAND. Best known as the songwriting trio, Holland-Dozier-Holland, at Hitsville, they wrote many of Motown’s biggest hits, early, mid-60s.

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