Arto Records Explained

Arto Records
Parent:Standard Music Roll Company
Status:Defunct
Genre:Blues, jazz
Country:U.S.
Location:New York City

Arto Records was a record company and label that operated from 1920 to 1923.

Arto was owned by the Standard Music Roll Company in Orange, New Jersey. The recording studio was located in New York City. Arto was one of the first labels to issue releases of vaudeville blues musicians. It also issued Lucille Hegamin and the Original Memphis Five.[1]

Arto issued a Black Label series of popular music including such artists as The California Ramblers and Vernon Dalhart, and a Red Label series of classical and ethnic music that included the Peerless Quartet and Fred Van Eps.[2]

Arto pressed masters for other record companies, including Nordskog Records for Kid Ory's band, the first black band from New Orleans to be recorded, and Arto's sister company Bell Records. The label licensed masters from other companies, particularly for release on the Red Label series.[2]

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: Rye, Howard. The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, vol. 1. 2002. Grove's Dictionaries Inc.. New York. 1561592846. 2nd. Barry Kernfeld. 84.
  2. Web site: The Arto Discography . November 18, 2009 . The Mainspring Online Discography Project . Mainspring Press . February 3, 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100924230700/http://mainspringpress.com/arto.html . September 24, 2010 .