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Eli Oberstein : ウィキペディア英語版
Eli Oberstein

Elliott Everett "Eli" Oberstein (13 December 1901 – 12 June 1960)〔( New York City, Births, 1891-1902, Ellias Oberstein )〕 was an American record producer and music business executive who was responsible for establishing the influential Bluebird record label in the 1930s, and later owned a succession of small labels in the 1940s and 1950s
==Life and career==
He was born Elias Oberstein in New York City,〔( 1940 United States Federal Census for Eli Oberstein )〕 the son of Ella and Morris Oberstein, a police officer of Russian Jewish descent, and grew up in the Bronx.〔( New York, State Census, 1915 for Elias Oberstein )〕〔(1920 United States Federal Census for Elias Oberstein )〕 By 1920 he was working as a clothing salesman,〔 before taking a job as a salesman under Ralph Peer at Okeh Records. In 1928, after Peer had joined the rival Victor Records, Oberstein joined him there as a salesman and accountant. By 1930 he had begun overseeing recording sessions, and that year also set up his own company, Crown Records, increasing his influence. After Peer left Victor in 1932, Oberstein began recording country musicians around the Southern states.〔( "Eli Oberstein- A & R Man for Bluebird", ''Bluegrass Messengers'' ). Retrieved 27 March 2014〕
He is also credited with establishing the Bluebird record label in the early 1930s, as a 35-cent cut price subsidiary of Victor. The label became successful during the Depression era, and established the reputations of many country and blues musicians including The Delmore Brothers, Ernest Tubb, Big Bill Broonzy, and Roosevelt Sykes.〔 In 1936 he became head of popular Artist & Repertoire at RCA Victor,〔(Donald Clarke, "OBERSTEIN, Eli and Maurice", ''Donald's Encyclopedia of Popular Music'' ). Retrieved 27 March 2014〕 He recruited Benny Goodman and Tommy Dorsey to RCA Victor, also adding Glenn Miller and Artie Shaw to the roster at Bluebird. As a record producer, Oberstein pioneered the practice of making deals with songwriters, music publishers and others, which eventually developed into what became known as "payola". In 1939, he was fired with no explanation by Victor Records.〔〔
His Crown record company soon went bankrupt, and he set up new labels including Royale and Varsity, based in Scranton, Pennsylvania; however, none of the leading musicians he had produced followed him, and the labels again folded. Oberstein then set up the Imperial Record Company, with the Elite label subsidiary. He recorded Bunny Berigan's final sessions, and began acquiring smaller companies and exchanging masters with Savoy Records. He circumvented the 1942-43 "Petrillo Ban", which stopped recordings being made by union members in the US, by making and distributing recordings that he claimed had been made in Mexico. He also reissued many older recordings made for labels such as Crown, Gennett and Paramount; the legality of his business methods in acquiring and re-selling the recordings sometimes came into question.〔( Alex Sayf Cummings, ''Democracy of Sound: Music Piracy and the Remaking of American Copyright in the Twentieth Century'', Oxford University Press, 2013 )〕 With bandleader Johnny Messner, he set up the Top Hat record label which specialised in risqué double entendre "party" records. Oberstein also established the Hit record label, which found chart success with Louis Prima's "Angelina" in 1944.〔〔
Oberstein was described as "a colorful wheeler-dealer".〔 In 1945 he sold his recording studio, pressing plant and master recordings to the Majestic radio company, and helped them set up the record label of the same name. He was briefly re-hired by RCA before he was again fired, and then relaunched his Varsity label. In 1948 he bought back the rights to the Majestic label, which had been sold to Mercury Records, and, after a period with Columbia Records, he acquired the rights to the Allegro classical music label in the early 1950s. He set up the Royale label through which he sold acquired recordings at budget prices, and bought the Rondo label in the mid-1950s. He based the label in Union City, New Jersey, as part of his group of companies which he called "Record Corporation of America" in the apparent hope that clients and customers would confuse it with the much larger RCA (Radio Corporation of America) company.〔( Mike Callahan, David Edwards, and Patrice Eyries, ''The Rondo Records Story'', 2003 ). Retrieved 27 March 2014〕 Later in the decade he sold many of his interests to the Pickwick International record company, while retaining his control of the Rondo label.〔
He died in Westport, Connecticut, in 1960 at the age of 58.〔( Connecticut Death Index, 1949-2001, Eli E Oberstein ). Retrieved 28 March 2014〕

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