Beatle craze a local hit
Times Leader - August 31, 2003 |
By
ALAN K. STOUT
TIMES
LEADER STAFF WRITER
August 31, 2003
What most people might not know, however, is that once The Fab Four brought their music to America, another blue collar town was instrumental in relaying the group's music to its millions of fans.
Scranton, Pennsylvania.
Throughout the 1960s, The Beatles' label,
Capitol Records, operated one of its largest record manufacturing plants in
Scranton. According to some reports, it was the largest such plant in the
United States and at the height of “Beatlmania'' its employees worked long
shifts pressing copies of the group's records
while trying to keep pace with demand.
Lalley says everything changed once The
Beatles made their famous appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1964.
Throughout the entire decade, he says, albums such as “Abbey Road'' and “Sgt.
Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band'' were all pressed in Scranton.
“We
worked around the clock and probably had what were the best years in the recording
business in many, many, many years,'' says Lalley. “In the shipping and
receiving department, it was nothing to work 10, 12 or 14 hours a day. We had
three shifts going at one time and we probably had 800 to 1,000 people there.''
According to Alan Sweeney, president of the
Lackawanna Historical Society, the history of making records in Northeastern
Pennsylvania dates back to the former Scranton Button Co. That company, says
Sweeney, also made phonograph records and even pressed copies of Irving
Berlin's “Over There”' during the first World War. The Scranton Button Co.
later changed its name to the Scranton Record Manufacturing Co. and was
purchased by Capitol Records in 1946.
In addition to Beatles records, many
classic recordings from the Capitol catalogue, including the music of Frank
Sinatra, were pressed in Scranton. Elvis Presley records were also made in
Scranton. Lalley, who continued to work at the facility when it became North
American Records from 1973-78, says the plant was hired by RCA Records after
Presley's death in 1977 to keep up with the demand of fans flocking to record
stores to buy his music.
“To
my knowledge, we made every album the Beatles put out,” he says.
(An Internet search using the keywords “Scranton”
and “Beatles'' revealed several websites dedicated to helping collectors
determine which Capitol plant produced the records in their collections.)
Sweeney says that even WEA Manufacturing, a
large CD-making plant located in Olyphant, has ties to the Capitol plant, since
one of Capitol's employees, Roy Marquardt, later founded Specialty Records,
which later became WEA. And there's even
a Scranton link to The Beatles first coming to North America. Sweeney says the
late Geoffrey Racine, an executive with Capitol who spent about a year working
in Scranton, met his wife while living there and later retired to Clarks
Summit. Racine, while working for Capitol Records of Canada, was the man who
first brought The Beatles to the label.
“He said he liked the beat of their music and he liked the song `I Want To Hold Your Hand,' “ says Sweeney. “He brought them to the label in Canada, where they became big even before they did in this country.”
Frank Alba, 62, of Pittston Township,
worked at Capitol in Scranton from 1963-69. He says his job at the plant was “record
tester,” which required him to take records from the pressing area and inspect
them for quality.
“I'd
go back to a sound proof booth and play them on a record player, and listen to
see if there were any scratches,” he says. “It was a fun job because I got to
know every word from every Beatles song. I'd play one record for eight hours.”
Alba also has stories of the plant
operating 24 hours a day, seven days a week making Beatles records. He says
that after the band's appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show, it was that one
famous song that made for a busy schedule.
“They
pushed out millions of them.”
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