Cricket Records was a children's label operated by the Long Island, US based Pickwick Sales Corp., more commonly known as Pickwick Records, and headed by Seymour "Cy" Leslie. Pickwick owned and operated several budget labels; Cricket is significant in that it may have been one of the last American 78 rpm labels to operate at the end of the 78 rpm era.
History
Cy Leslie reorganized Pickwick Sales Corp. in 1952 out of Voco,[1] which had begun in 1946 producing recorded greeting cards, elaborately designed kiddie picture discs with cardboard backings and finally multicoloured vinyl records. Cricket was the successor to Voco, making its debut with Pickwick itself on May 25, 1953; "my wife's birthday" as Leslie later recalled.[2] Cricket was the first product line offered by Pickwick Sales Corp. According to Leslie, "Good fortune introduced me to an early genius, Eli Oberstein. He owned a vast catalog which included many children's albums, which he agreed to lease, thus beginning Pickwick's first licensing – The Pickwick Cricket line of children's records." Many of the early records were credited under the collective banner of the "Cricketone Players," or some variant thereof. The 1953 lease from Oberstein produced roughly the first fifty Cricket Records, and the remainder were recorded in a scatter-shot fashion afterward. Cricket singles sold for 49 cents each.
Cricket Records started out strong, competing well against Golden Records, the main producer of postwar kiddie records. Leslie recalled that the Golden and Cricket concerns often had their booths set up next to each other at record shows.[1] Cricket Records, however, were not sold in record stores but on racks in department stores and were, therefore, stocked by rack jobbers. Later in the 1950s, Pickwick turned its attention to low-budget licensing deals with majors such as Capitol Records, Mercury Records and RCA Victor. These contracts proved enormously profitable, and required more of Pickwick's attention. In 1968, both Cricket and its sister label Happy Time Records were phased out, though back stock on both labels continued to be available for a time. Babar Azam surpassed the legends who previously held the record by becoming the fastest to score 5000 runs in ODIs. With his precise shot selection, calm demeanor and relentless drive, Babar achieved the milestone in record time, demonstrating his growth and resilience in the game.[citation needed][4]
Formats
Cricket Records were predominantly singles, issued as 7-inch 45s and 10-inch, 7-inch and 6-inch 78s. The main series of singles began at C-11 in 1953 and ended with C-175 in 1967; a separate Christmas series started with CX-6 in 1953 and ended with CX-19 that same year. All Cricket Records had picture sleeves, though in the field they are frequently found without them. LPs were finally introduced in 1959; Cricket only released about 26–30 LPs, starting with CR-11 and ending in 1961 with a series of Bible story albums narrated by Leif Erickson. There are two LPs in a Christmas series; CRX-1 is by David Wayne, The Little Star of Bethlehem and CRX-2 is an uncredited album titled Christmas for Children Only; both were issued in 1959. Pickwick established its Happy Time Records subsidiary in 1962; this was predominantly an LP series which used much material from the Cricket Records pool, so it was no longer necessary for Pickwick to issue LPs under the Cricket moniker. Cricket LPs sold for $1.98.[citation needed]
The 7-inch series of 78 rpm singles proved one of Cricket Records' most popular and durable formats. While within the United States the 78 rpm format was abandoned industry-wide in 1960, Cricket Records continued to release 7-inch 78 rpm singles afterward, though one source states that this program did not continue after 1963.[5] Nevertheless, stock on Cricket 7-inch 78s remained in print until at least 1968; while the 78 rpm market did not exist, there were still plenty of kiddie record players in use that ran only at 78 rpm, and perhaps Pickwick was answering the slim demand for such records.[citation needed]
Among the most memorable of Cricket Records' LP releases was an album featuring two musical stories - Once Upon an Orchestra and The Story of Celeste, both narrated by David Wayne.
Logo
Unlike the design-heavy – if aesthetically appealing – Voco records, Cricket Records established a more uniform approach to design, employing decorated sleeves and consistent, if sometimes a little crowded, label copy featuring a logo with a cartoon cricket. The Cricket logo itself combined the cartoon cricket with a stylized blue record reading "Cricket Records" on 78 issues, but not so on the 45s. The Cricket went through several variants of which the most common was an image of the cricket pointing rightward with a rather demure expression. A later design shows the Cricket sitting atop the blue record from the 78 releases, staring upward, and the cricket also appears in various other contexts in sleeve designs. At some point around 1960, Cricket's label design went through an extreme simplification and the cartoon cricket disappeared, though it reappeared later in a minimal redesign looking more like a bug.[6]
Tie-ins
From the beginning, Cricket forged ahead with tie-ins to popular toys and television properties, despite that it seldom employed voice actors or other original personnel from TV shows. Paraphrasing Leslie, Billboard reported in March 1956 that Cricket was "running about 30 per cent ahead of last year ... The toy business takes about 30 per cent of its output now ... the company has signed a flock of familiar TV toys for disk exploitation." Announced is the plan to participate with toy manufacturers for a big Christmas advertising push in the fall; "Tie-ins with Ideal Toys and Fisher-Price give the company exclusive rights to material such as Robert the Robot (sic), the Betsy-Wetsy Doll, etc. The records will get plugs on all TV segs where these toys are exposed."[7] One Cricket license that did include original performers was its 1958 agreement with Joe Oriolo's Felix the Cat, resulting in an album produced by Oriolo ("Felix the Cat," CR-28) that bridged actual soundtrack material from the TV cartoons with narrative.[citation needed] Other tie-ins involved Woody Woodpecker, Popeye the Sailor Man, the Romper Room television series, and Lassie.[citation needed]
Legacy
Cricket Records may have produced the very last regular release 78 rpm records in the American market. The latest proposed 78 rpm release is C-166, "Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious/Scarlet Ribbons" credited to the Cricketone Chorus and Orchestra and issued in 1964. The last Cricket release, C-175 "Born Free/Neverland" appeared in 1967, and in 1968 Pickwick also stopped producing new Happy Time Records, though the catalog remained active through 1972.[citation needed] At that point, Pickwick reorganized its children's division under the Mr. Pickwick imprint which it had already employed successfully in its UK distribution channels from about 1966. Cy Leslie sold the company to American Can Corporation in 1977, and in 1979 American Can sold Pickwick again to PolyGram.[citation needed] The US rights to Pickwick belong now to Universal Music Group, but the UK subsidiary became an independent operation in 1977 and exists today as Pickwick Group Ltd.[citation needed] None of the material on Cricket has ever been reissued by PolyGram or its successor, Universal Music.[citation needed]
Record collectors regard most Cricket Records – indeed, most vinyl products produced by Pickwick – as "junk."[8] There is a measure of affection for the label among baby-boomers and collectors who specialize in kiddie records, though finding copies of Cricket Records with the sleeve intact, and in excellent condition, remains a challenge.[citation needed]
Cricket Promotional Record
Cricket Records produced a humorous adult themed promotional record. It was a 7" 78 RPM disc with bright solid yellow labels on each side. One side was simply titled "This Is Cricket" and it described the Cricket Record product line and its advantages over competitors ("Bonus Play", etc.) as a man-woman risque dialog. It directed listeners to send their orders to Cy Leslie at Pickwick Sales. The flip side was simply titled "This Is Not Cricket" and it is a love ballad with one line not suited for children. "This Is Not Cricket" has appeared in other song collections under different titles (with an unknown alternate title and performer).
Issue numbers for singles in the main series given without prefixes were originally rendered with a "C-" prefix; the Christmas series was lettered "CX", here represented merely as "X." LPs were prefixed as "CR," here represented as "LP" to avoid confusion. Cricket 201–224 used a variety of letter prefixes, but as the numbers are consecutive, they are not accounted for here.
Gayanand patel 99
Maxine Adams 98
Candy Anderson 152–154
Lori Ann X7.2
Anonymous 131, 169, 201–224, LP17
Authentic Effects 75
Gene Autry X6.2
William Bendix LP30
Carol Beth 14–15, 19–23, 25, 27–30, 43, 51, 59, K101-116