Goodyear Great Songs of Christmas, Volume 2. 1962

     After selling out the 900,000 copies of the first volume of “Great Songs of Christmas” Volume 1 in 1961, Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company contracted with Columbia Records to produce 1.5 million copies for the 1962 second volume.  Customers flocked to Goodyear retail stores just as they had the year before, and again, as the year before, every copy was sold by the first week of December.
     As with the first, Columbia and Goodyear produced an album of classic Christmas music performed by gifted artists of the time.  Here, read the listing of selections as described by Goodyear and Columbia on the back of the album jacket, “Goodyear Great Songs of Christmas, Volume 2.”

     To all Christian nations around the world, Christmas symbolizes our hopes for peace and our belief in the brotherhood of man.  And while each nation has its own traditional carols, numbers of favorites are sung today in many languages.  Everywhere they are heard, “The Great Songs of Christmas” inspire the same universal emotions.
     The origins of some of this music are perhaps as old as the celebration of Christmas, while others are surprisingly new.  Many of the world’s great composers have contributed to this wealth of music.

Hark! The Herald Angels Sing, performed here by Percy Faith and his orchestra, was composed by Felix Mendelssohn in 1840, although not as a Christmas carol.  Mendelssohn could never have dreamed that a portion of the cantata he composed in praise of Johann Gutenberg and the invention of printing could become a joyful and triumphant Christmas carol.

Next, Salt Lake City’s glorious Mormon Tabernacle Choir sings O Little Town of Bethlehem.  Inspired by a trip to the Holy Land, Phillips Brooks, Protestant Episcopal bishop, wrote the words to ths tenderly familiar carol in 1868.  The children of his Sunday school persuaded Lewis Redner, the organist of Philadelphia’s Holy Trinity Church, to write the music. 
    
Eileen Farrell is known throughout the world as one of the greatest sopranos of our time. Here she sings with a sweet and beautiful clarity It Came Upon the Midnight Clear and the less familiar Coventry Carol.  This is an unusual example of a “sad” carol, a haunting English lullaby whose melody dates back to 1591.  The orchestra and chorus accompanying Miss Farrell are conducted by Luther Henderson. 

Then Andre Kostelanetz, his chorus and orchestra reverently offer Away In A Manger.

Few of the millions who sing Joy to the World realize that this carol, distinctiveyly arranged here by Percy Faith, was adapted in 1930 from a theme in Handel’s “Messiah.”

The origins of The First Noel are considerably more obscure.  The words and music were first printed in 1933, but this French folk song is thought to date back to the year 1500.  Nelson Eddy’s familiar voice is heard in this traditional carol.

Next, Eileen Farrell sings the melodious, gentle lullaby, Sleep, Holy Babe.

The tune of The Holly and the Ivy is many centuries old and is thought to have originated in France.  The holly represents young men; the ivy, young women, a symbolism often found in very old carols.  The Norman Luboff Choir, one of America’s outstanding choral groups, sings it.

Baritone Earl Wrightson and Andre Kostelanetz, his chorus and orchestra complete the first portion of the collection with moving performances of two classics:  O Come, All Ye Faithful and Silent Night.  The first known maunscript of the first hymns dates from 1751, although the song is probably much older.  It also is known as”Adeste Fidelis” and sometimes as the “Portugueses Hymn,” though it has no association with Portugal.  It is a “processional carol,” one of those sung by religious orders on the way to Christmas Midnight Mass.

Silent Night undoubtedly is the most widely loved Christmas Carol. It was presented on Christmas Eve in 1818 by a young assistant pastor and a church organist in a little Bavarian village, after a few hours of hurried collaboration made necessary when the decrepit organ broke down just before the Christmas service.  That first performance was a three-part vocal with guitar accompaniment.

The gala Deck the Hall With Boughs of Holly is brilliantly performed here by The Philadelphia Orchestra under Eugene Ormandy.  This old Welsh melody actually predates Christianity in England and was, in fact, incorporated into Christmas festivities later.

Andre Previn plays the spirited English carol, God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen (i.e., “May God keep you in good spirits, gentlemen”).  The Mormon Tabernacle Choir sings the ethereal Angels We Have Heard on High and festive Good King Wenceslas.  The music for this latter carol was adapted from a Swedish Lutheran Hymnal which dates back to 1582.

One of the best-loved orchestral works written in celebration of the Christmas season is Tchaikovsky’s ballet, The Nutcracker.  The composer completed the ballet in the fall of 1891, and that same year proceeded to fashion some of its sections into a suite.  From this Nutcracker Suite, Op., 71A, Leonard Bernstein conducts the New York Philharmonic in Dance of the Sugar-Plum Fairy and Waltz of the Flowers.  The Nutcracker Suite was first performed in 1892 at the St. Petersburg (now Leningrad) Opera House with the overwhelming approval of its audience — prophetic of the subsequent universal popularity of this musical fairy tale.

Generations of children have associated Victor Herbert’s Babes in Toyland with the suspense, surprises and glitter of the festive side of Christmas.  Andre Kostelanetz and his orchestra perform sparkling versions of Toyland and March of the Toys  from Herbert’s nostalgic score.

O Tannenbaum, which children often sing as “O Christmas Tree,” is an old German melody particularly well known from the little music boxes so popular during the last century.  The tune has been ascribed to a twelfth century song called “Mihi est Propositum.” About 1824 it was adapted to its present form as a carol.  (Still later it became the basis for “Maryland, My Maryland.”)

The old English wassail song, Here We Come A-Caroling, has an infectgious refrain.  It is probable that this carol was popular as long ago as Shakespeare’s time; it remains one of the most happy and festive songs of the season.  Both of these selections are sung delightfully by the Norman Luboff Choir. Finally, Nelson Eddy sings the seasonally appropriate Jingle Bells.

Enjoy “The Great Songs of Christmas” and have a Merry Christmas!

Goodyear Great Songs of Christmas, Volume 2. 1962
This blog is written and published by DLF Music Transfer, LLC  dba Christmas LPs to CD.  For more information on Christmas music or to purchase CDs of classic Christmas records on CD, please visit our website www.christmaslpstocd.com , call us 888-384-6970, or e-mail us david@dlfmusic.com.

Goodyear Great Songs of Christmas Volume 1

    “The Great Songs of Christmas” Volume 1 was a premium record created exclusively for Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company by Columbia Record Productions.  The album was offered for sale for $1.00 exclusively in Goodyear retail tire stores.  This album was available only in monoaural (mono) format. 

Goodyear Great Songs of Christmas, Album 1

Song Listing as it appears on the back of the album:

Unto Us A Child Is Born – From Handel’s Messiah.  Composed in 1741 by Frederick Handel, the complete masterpiece was first performed in Dublin after the composer had written the entire work in only three weeks.  Legend has it that King George II attended the first performance and was so moved that he rose to his feet in the final Hallelujah Chorus – forcing the audience to rise – a custom followed to this day.  Recorded here by the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, Leonard Bernstein Conducting.

Ring Christmas Bells – One of the merriest of Christmas carols, Frank DeVol and The Rainbow Strings present a medley of melodious expression of this joyous season. 
The First Noel – Genuinely a folk-song with obscure origin, this simple and most charming of carols is believed to have had its beginning in France sometime near 1500.
We Wish You A Merry Christmas – A popular song that has become a seasonal classic, performed by Mr. DeVol in beautiful complement to the older carols and hymns.

O Come, All Ye Faithful – One of the oldest of the joyful and triumphant carols, also known as Adeste Fideles.  The oldest manuscript dates from 1751, though the melody is much older.  Sometimes called The Portugese Hymn.
Jesu Bambino – Composed in 1917 by the famous organist Pietro Yon, The Jesus Baby is of such delicate simplicity, it quickly found its place among the lasting carols.  These two numbers are recorded here by Percy Faith and his orchestra, one of America’s truly great musical organizations.

 O Little Town of Bethlehem – An American carol, written by Phillips Brooks for the children of his Sunday School after a visit to the Holy Land.  The music was composed by Lewis Redner, organist, who awakened in his sleep with a strange awareness of the melody.  He wrote it down at once and presented it to the Sunday School the next morning.  The year was 1868 – The church: Holy Trinity, in Philadelphia.  Performed in this great album by America’s great concert and opera artist, Eileen Farrell.

The Twelve Days of Christmas – A ballad masterpiece, performed here by the incomparable Burl Ives.  Actually it is an old English carol which has assumed great stature in this country to the point of becoming a popular song.  Its pleasant story form lends itself perfectly to the great voice and style of Ives.

Sleigh Ride – Colorful, descriptive and joyous, this fine rendition by Andre Kostelanetz and his orchestra is included in this album as a great and remembered sound of Christmas – a delighful background for our children’s Christmas, a note of nostalgia for the elders.

God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen – An English carol, dating back to anonymous poets of about 1600.  Note that the true meaning of this carol is often altered by the comma in the title – making reference to “merry gentlemen.”  This is not correct.
We Three Kings – Written in the 1800s by John Henry Hopkins Jr., of Vermont, he used ancient musical styles to portray the biblical Magi.
Deck the Halls – with boughs of holly! An old Welsh custom at time of Yule, this festivity predated Christianity in England and continues today.  These three great selections are performed by the Norman Luboff Choir.

What Child Is This? – William Chatterton Dix wrote the lyrics that transposed the melody, Greensleeves, into a charming carol.  The tune, dating from the 1500s was one of the best-known and loved of folk music.  Mitch Miller and his popular Sing Along group give it a most necessary personal and folksy interpretation.

Carol of the Bells – Out of the distance, we hear the “ding-dong” of Christmas bells, “sweet silver bells.”  Soon they are upon us, “From everywhere, Filling the air, O how they pound, Raising the sound, O’er hill and dale, Telling their tale…”  And with the special gradeur of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, this lovely Ukrainian carol will add greatly to your Christmas Day.

Silent Night – Again the Mormon Tabernacle Choir lifts its great voice to bring us the most loved of all Christmas carols.  In the great church of St. Nicholas, in Oberndorf, Bavaria, an organist and a vicar wrote this masterpiece in only a few hours.  The year, 1818.  Because the church organ was in disrepair, Silent Night was presented first with guitar accompaniment.

O Holy Night – One of the most beautiful of carols, this is also known as the Cantique de Noel, and was written by Adolphe Adam, the celebrated French composer, who is remembered today chiefly for his ballet, Giselle, and for this carol.  It is performed here by Earl Wrightson with Andre Kostelanetz and his orchestra.

Below is the print ad from a 1961 magazine for Goodyear’s “The Great Songs of Christmas” Volume 1.
Magazine Ad for Goodyear Great Songs of Christmas, Volume 1, 1961
This blog is written and published by DLF Music Transfer, LLC  dba Christmas LPs to CD.  For more information on Christmas music or to purchase CDs of classic Christmas records on CD, please visit our website www.christmaslpstocd.com , call us 888-384-6970, or e-mail us david@dlfmusic.com.



Why did Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company create "The Great Songs of Christmas" record series?

Goodyear’s Great Songs of Christmas Volume 4
Columbia Special Products
Catalog #CSP1555
1964

     Have you ever wondered why a major tire retailer would enter the business of selling Christmas records?  Why Christmas records?  Why not sell model blimps or cars and trucks with Goodyear tires?  Who came up with the idea of Christmas records to sell tires?  The answer is Stanley Arnold.
     Who is Stanley Arnold? Stanley Arnold describes himself as an “idea man.”  In his 1968 book published by  Prentice-Hall, Tale of the Blue Horse and Other Million Dollar Adventures, he says, “I’m the president of a most unusual kind of business; one that earns more than a million dollars a year in fees bringing exciting ideas to almost three dozen blue-chip, blue-ribbon, blue blood corporations.”
     “My formula for success is simple:  I’ve built my entire career on putting carts before horses, and feeling before logic.” Feeling before logic….Christmas music for tire dealers….and so began the Goodyear “Great Songs of Christmas” record album series.
     Who better to tell you the story of the “Great Songs of Christmas” than the man himself? The following is an excerpt from Mr. Arnold’s book that tells the story of the birth of these highly cherished holiday favorites.
     “My professional career began in 1948 with a musical comedy that opened in New York in September of that fateful year at the old Adelphi Theater on Broadway.  It was called ‘The Hilarities of 1948.’ I wrote the book as well as the lyrics for sixteen songs.  The show’s cast included Morey Amsterdam and a live gorilla.  I devastated the critics with my lyrical hilarities; in return they devastated my work.
     “In ten days my first musical enterprise came to a cacophonous end after seventeen performances.  It was an upsetting turn of events for the gorilla, who was just beginning to enjoy the glitter of showbiz, but the despairing sighs of a heartbroken, housebroken ape were no match for the cries of despair from the shows angels.  ‘Hilarities of 1948” proved to be, however, an instructive interlude in the progress of my career because one of my songs, ‘Where in the World,’ turned out to be an incredible success that was published by seven different record companies, and actually netted me royalties from countries as remote as Czechoslovakia.  This song was a transcendent work full of melodic lilt and lyrical moxie.  It also happened to occupy the ‘flip side’ of another song by Rodgers and Hart with the cumbersome title of ‘Bewitched, Bothered, and Bewildered.’  That year this skimpy Rodgers and Hart number turned out to be one of the twenty most popular tunes in the country.  ‘Where in the World,’ a nifty creation in its own right, shared in its popularity.  This taught me a valuable less — always associate with a winner.  Ever since then I refined my ear further for the sound of success.  Billion dollar corporations have a music all their own: the unmistakable sound of triumph.  These were the companies that could implement my million dollar ideas.  Together we would make the most beautiful music.
     “Shortly after I started my million dollar idea company I was invited to attend a meeting at The American Tobacco Comany, where a serious problem was outlined to the assembled professionals on the selling of tobacco products.  The subject of the meeting was a household name in the world of cigarette brands: Lucky Strike.  To my astonishment, I learned that this celebrated brand of cigarettes had been travelling a downward sales path which would have to be halted soon or Lucky Strike would eventually fade away.  To my great surprise, I learned that every day of every week of every month for many months, the sales of Lucky Strike had gone down.  The pattern, as they say at research presentations, was clear.  Something had to be done to reverse the trend.  It was decided at the meeting that something would have to be done to stimulate the sale of Lucky Strike cartons which were purchased mostly in supermarkets.  A good deal of research findings were reviewed at this meeting, such as the ‘demographic characteristics’ of Lucky Strike buyers, the ‘median income’ of Lucky Strike smokers, the ‘pattern of distribution’ of Luck Strike sales — but they all added up to a single word: help.
     “I summarized the many points of the meeting in great detail at the upper right-hand corner of at three-by-five card. ‘LS in trouble,’ I noted, and returned to my office to reflect on the problem.  All the way back to the office I kept humming the tune of the Lucky Stike television commercial that had been played at the meeting.  ‘Remember how great’ was the name of the tune.  (The selling theme that year was ‘Remember how great cigarettes used to taste? Luckies still do.’) Remember how great — it was a tune that was always on key even if sales of Luckies were off key.  The answer came to me fast.  I decided that music would reverse the sales decline of Lucky Strike.
     “The following week, after allowing a respectable amount of time to elapse so that my client would feel that I had worked around the clock hammering out an answer, I brought my proposal to American Tobacco.
     “People may be losing interest in Lucky Strike, I said, but they would never lose interest in music.  Offer the public a record album of popular musical hits, I suggested — all-time hits like ‘St Louis Blues,’ played by an all-time great performer such as Louis Armstrong.  Songs like ‘Stardust’ played by Eddie Duchin; ‘Mood Indigo’ by Duke Ellington; ‘My Heart Belongs to Daddy’ sung by Mary Martin, and eight other numbers of this quality, all under the album title, ‘Remember How Great.’
     “As I went through the list of performers who would appear on this record, I had to gulp several times because I began to wonder whether I would indeed be able to deliver on my promise.  I had spoken to Columbia Records the day before and they had told me that they could most assuredly put together a ‘premium’ record (a record that is sold in conjunction with the purchase of a commercial product, such as a carton of cigarettes) with all the talent I was enumerating for my unbelieving clients at American Tobacco.  But hearing myself reading the names, it sounded incredible.  In addition to Louis Armstrong, Eddie Duchin, Duke Ellington and Mary Martin, I promised these names and titles as well:

  • Count Basie            ‘One O’Clock Jump’
  • Les Brown              ‘Sentimental Journey’
  • Xavier Cugat           ‘Brazil’
  • Tommy Dorsey        ‘I Dream of You’
  • Harry James            ‘Ciribiribin’
  • Andre Kostelanetz   ‘Night and Day’
  • Dinah Shore             ‘Buttons and Bows’
    ” ‘And not only would all this talent be offered on one record,’ I said.  ‘You can obtain all this for a little less than a dollar, and you can sell it to the public for just one dollar.  That’s still two dollars less than anyone would pay for a similar record in a regular record shop, and you would liquidate your entire costs.’
    ” ‘Very fascinating,’ said one of the marketing managers of American Tobacco, ‘but what does all this have to do with cigarette sales? I notice that you don’t even have the tune, ‘Smoke Gets in Your Eyes’ on your list.’
     ” ‘You’ll see what this has to do with cigarette sales if you offer it as an American Tobacco exclusive,’ I said. ‘Offer it at the special rate of one dollar — only if purchased with a carton of Lucky Strikes.  I bet you’ll even get non-smokers to buy Lucky cartons.’
     “There are times when it is comforting to deal with a desperate client.  He will even try music, if all else has failed.
     “Lucky Strike decided to offer the record, ‘Remember How Great,’ in conjuction with the sale of cartons only.  If the customer did not buy a Lucky Strike carton, ‘Remember How Great” could not be purchased either, even if the customer wanted to pay ten dollars for it.  The big question that soon arose, however, was how to handle the proof of purchase — how the customer could prove to American Tobacco that a carton of Lucky Strike has actually been purchased.  I proposed a simple, uncluttered solution.
    ” ‘Let’s ask the housewife simply to tear off the end flap of a Lucky Strike carton and mail it in with her one dollar,’ I suggested.
     ” ‘Not good enough,’ I was told.  ‘People would go around tearing off our end flaps in supermarkets across the country without buying our cartons.  We would liquidate a lot of records that way, but we sure wouldn’t sell many cartons.’
     “I granted that there was always a small amount of finagling by customers in search of valuable premiums, such as our record, but I also pointed out that this is usually a miniscule percentage of the total number of purchases.  I felt it was a worthwhile risk because the simple device of enclosing an end flap with a check for one dollar would be the easiest way to attract a maximum number of carton buyers to the record offer.  I was at my businesslike best, but to little avail.  American Tobacco was determined to obtain bona fide proof of purchase from every consumer who ordered ‘Remember How Great.’  They insisted that anyone who sent in a dollar to purchase this exclusive record would have to send in the wrapper of every pack of Lucky Strikes in the carton.  In other words, if you wanted to obtain this record you would have to mail in a check or money order for one dollar, plus the empty wrappers of ten Lucky Strike packs.
     ” ‘Think of all the mail you’ll receive,’ I warned them.  When I had finished presenting my cautious, measured, businesslike argument, I was told in the firmest tones by a senior officer at the meeting:
     ‘This is the way we’re going to do it.’ In its own way, that also had a musical ring to it.  The note of determination was clear.  The client was saying, ‘This is the way it’s going to be,’ and that was the way it was going to be.
     “I will say in retrospect that I demonstated great acumen in going along with that resolve.  A few weeks after the displays went up in supermarkets across the land offering ‘Remember How Great,’ an absolute avalanche of mail arrived at The American Tobacco Company.  No less that two million three hundred thousand people from every corner of the United States had crammed ten empty wrappers of Lucky Strike packs along with checks and money orders for one dollar (many had enclosed actual dollar bills) into an envelope, and had mailed that formidable evidence to New York.  No less than twenty-three million empty packs of Lucky Strike were sent in the mails! (It served me right for acting businesslike, reasonable, cautious, and measured.  My client demonstrated to me what confidence in an idea really meant.)
     “Shortly after the conclusion of this brief campaign, another review of the sales fortunes of Lucky Strike was held at the offices of American Tobacco, but on a far more happy note.  For the first time since its downward trend the sales of Lucky Strike had actually begun to move in an upward direction.  American Tobacco had sold more than two million records of popular music; but they had also sold more than two million cartons of cigarettes.
     “It was a million dollar triumph for a million dollar idea.  But it turned out to be only a curtain raiser for another musical idea that made American Tobacco’s triumphant experience look modest by comparison.  Shortly after the successful conclusion to the Case of the Twenty-three Million Packs of Lucky Strike, I started a campaign to make the most beautiful music of my career for another billion dollar client, The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company of Akron, Ohio.
     “Winter, I knew, is a good season for selling tires.  Just before Christmas, I also knew, is an exceptionally good time to sell tires.  Moreover, I knew that Goodyear salesmen knew how to sell tires once they got people into their sixty thousand retail outlets across the country. Having witnessed the power of music to attact people to supermarkets to purchase cartons of Lucky Strike, I knew I was on to a million dollar device to bring people into these sixty thousand retail establishments.  For every ten people that came into Goodyear stores, I knew that eight actually purchased tires or accessories.  I was sure that music could be the pied piper to bring people into all those Goodyear outlets. 
     “Unfortunately, there is an easy tendency in the idea business to ‘marry’ an idea so closely to your client’s product that only the client likes the idea.  The rest of the country is simply bored, and that can be a catastrophe.  Records have been produced with titles almost as literal as ‘Music to Buy Tires By.’  I would never suggest a title like that to a client (unless the son of the board chairman composed the music).  Nor is it logical to suggest a title like ‘Round and Round We Go’ or ‘Wheeling Along Together’ or other names of equivalent creative fire that may lift a client’s spirits on Monday while depressing his sales during the rest of the week. 
     “A subject that might appear, at least on the surface, to be completely unconnected to tires, is Christmas.  Santa Claus never used a tire, but it occurred to me that Christmas had two deep connections with Goodyear.  First, everyone is interested in Christmas; second, Goodyear sells many, many tires during the pre-Christmas season.  That would be the million dollar idea for Goodyear, I decided: an album of Christmas music.
     “A few weeks later I was on a plane to Akron to present an idea that no one at Goodyear asked for, that no one at Goodyear ever thought would succeed, that no one at Goodyear ever expected would become the greatest premium idea of the decade.  I resolved that I would not take ‘no’ for an answer, because this idea would alter an industry.
     “On an afternoon in March 1960, I proposed to the senior management group of The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company, headed by Victor Holt, Goodyear’s executive vice president (he later became president), that they offer to the public during the weeks before Christmas a special premium record which would be called ‘The Great Songs of Christmas.’  It would not be a grab-bag of the usual kind of over-commercialized popular tunes so often associated with Christmas — songs like ‘I Saw Mama Kissing Santa Claus,’ ‘Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer,’ ‘White Christmas,’ ‘All I Want for Christmas is My Two Front Teeth.’
     “I suggested instead that Goodyear’s collection  of Christmas music should consist of great songs, precisely as its title promised. ‘The Great Songs of Christmas’ should include timeless works performed by the world’s great musical artists.  I suggested selections such as ‘Carol of the Bells’ sung by the Mormon Tabernacle Choir…’O Little Town of Bethlehem’ sung by Eileen Farrell…’Unto Us a Child is Born’ from Handel’s Messiah performed by Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic Orchestra.  I presented a list of twelve selections that were so breath-taking in their scope, of such grandeur in their range of talent, that I crossed my fingers to be sure that my unbusinesslike staff had been sufficiently businesslike in promising these titles.
     “After I had completed my presentation it was immediately apparent that Goodyear liked my lineup of music and the artists who would perform these timeless works.  But the idea was too far removed for the small man carrying an enormous idea who had dropped into Akron, Ohio for the ostensible purpose of increasing the sales of Goodyear tires.  It was presumptuous.  It was unprecedented.  Yet, it seemed to make sense.  Goodyear’s management was torn between the great human appeal of my idea and the great corporate tendency to ‘think of the product.’
     ” ‘We’re not in the record business.  We’re in the tire business,’ they said.
     ” ‘You’re in the people business,’ I countered.  People have always been interested in Christmas music, I argued, but people had never been able to obtain so much magnificent Christmas music on one record.  And if you want to bring people to your sixty thousand retail outlets, I continued, what better way than to offer them the world’s greatest Christmas songs at the world’s lowest price — just one dollar for the whole album.
     “I had worked out an incredible arrangement with Columbia Records.  They would assemble a collection of the greatest recording artists from Columbia’s roster of performers — and they would make this incomparable record available as an exclusive to Goodyear for less than a dollar.  Goodyear could then liquidate whatever the record cost them by offering it to the public for just one dollar, provided they came to Goodyear outlets to obtain their record.  Even if no one ever purchased a single tire, the record would not cost Goodyear a penny.
     “After the initial shock of this proposal that was not related to tires, Goodyear began to warm up to the idea.  I carefully shifted the conversation to the number of records that Goodyear should order to get the program started.  I turned to Victor Holt and asked, ‘How many records do you think you ought to begin with the first year?’ I was already thinking in five-year units.
     ” ‘About thirty thousand,’ he said. ‘Do you think that’s too much?’
     ” ‘No,’ I replied.  ‘In fact, I don’t think it’s enough.’
     ” ‘Well, how many do you think we should order?’ he asked.
     ” ‘Three million,’ I said.
     “It was a good thing I was sitting down when he said thirty thousand, and that he was sitting down when I said three million.
     “A classic corporate compromise was struck.  Goodyear would canvass its dealers and find out exactly how many records each dealer thought he could sell.  Survey forms were mailed out, and several weeks later the returns were in.  Goodyear would order ninety thousand records.  Now if you were to divide sixty thousand into ninety thousand, that comes to one and a half records per Goodyear outlet.  I felt that Goodyear’s dealers, all sixty thousand of them, did not know what they were talking about for two reasons: first, common logic told me that if Goodyear went ahead and advertised ‘The Great Songs of Christmas,’ considerably more than 1.5 customers per store would come in to buy this immensely desirable record; second, I knew it would be impossible to buy half a record from Columbia.
     “Unfortunately there is nothing as unassailable in corporate decision-making as a field consensus.  Once a survey of dealers has been made it is easier to amend the Constitution of the United States than to revise the immutable revelation of that survey.  Nevertheless, I decided to overide that immutable revelation, and I used a most effective technique.  I told as many people as possible that I thought the field survey was all wrong.  I conducted this nefarious campaign for several weeks, and before long the Goodyear order began to rise like an undervalued stock that suddenly announces a cure for old age.  Before long I had successfully increased the Goodyear order to nine hundred thousand records — and I still felt this was far below the amount they should have ordered.  But when a senior vice president of a billion dollar corporation calls you in his office and says, ‘I’ve had enough, Stanley,’ you know your client has had enough.  The program was finally underway with an initial order for nine hundred thousand albums of ‘The Great Songs of Christmas.’
     “The decision was made, and order was placed, advertising was prepared, everything was humming along briskly at Goodyear until a new problem reared its troublesome head: security.  Firestone, a major competitor of Goodyear, was also going to offer a record of Christmas music that year.  These coincidences are common in the world of ideas, but the deciding factors are the relative quality of the ideas and the determination with which management supports them.  I was convinced that no Christmas album on earth would match the majesty of Goodyear’s ‘Great Songs of Christmas,’ and there was no doubt about management’s enthusiasm for the quality of their offering.  I was therefore successful in allaying Goodyear’s fears about having their pre-Christmas program neutralized by the Friestone record.  And I heard subsequently that Firestone had ordered considerably less records.  It would be an interesting derby: Goodyear had to liquidate nine hundred thousand albums; Firestone had to liquidate far less.  (There were moments, I will confess, when I perspired a little, but never in Akron.)
     “I will spare you further suspense. By December 1, 1961, the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company instructed its advertising agency to cancel all advertising for Album One of ‘The Great Songs of Christmas’ for one eminently businesslike reason that was emphatically substantiated by an urgent field survey: there was not a single album left in the United States.  Fully three weeks before Christmas, more than nine hundred thousand Americans had gone to Goodyear outlets to purchase this classic anthology of Christmas music.
     “Alert readers have no doubt noted the phrase ‘Album One.’  The Goodyear people in Akron never expected my musical notions to survive even a first season.  But I can reveal with more than a modicum of pride that Goodyear repeated the program in 1962, with a complete new set of Christmas songs, performed by an entirely new lineup of distinguished artists.  For that second Christmas season, Goodyear placed an order for one and a half million rocords.  By the first week of December, for the secound year in succession, Goodyear direct its advertising agency to cancel all advertising for ‘The Great Songs of Christmas’ because they had by then sold out the entire inventory of record albums.
     “In 1963 ‘The Great Songs of Christmas’ was repeated again.  To show you what a fertile lode I had tapped with this idea, here is a sampling of the twenty selections that made up the third year’s version of this remarkable series:
  • ‘Silent Night’                                          Julie Andrews
  • ‘O Come All Ye Faithful’                        Mormon Tabernacle Choir
  • ‘Ave Maria’                                            Isaac Stern
  • ‘Panis Angelicus’                                     Robert Goulet
  • ‘Joseph Dearest, Joseph Mine’                New Christy Minstrels
  • ‘Hark! the Herald Angels Sing’                Norman Luboff Choir
  • ‘Carol of the Bells’                                   Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic
     “That year Goodyear ordered a little under two million albums.  And, again, during the third year, Goodyear cancelled all its advertising before the middle of December, because every record had been purchased.
     “By 1966 Goodyear ordered nearly three million records — the figure I proposed to Victor Holt in the first place — and Goodyear sold out the entire order.
     “In a period of seven years, Goodyear will have sold nearly fifteen million Christmas records through its tire outlets.  Of these fifteen million customers, Goodyear will sell tires or accessories to no less than eighty percent of them.  In other words, an idea that no one expected, that no one wanted, that no one anticipated would succeed, has actually been helping Goodyear sell its products to twelve million customers without costing the company a penny.
     “One postscript:  the advertising agency that was instructed year after year to cancel all advertising for ‘The Great Songs of Christmas’ because it had been sold out weeks before December 25 was Young & Rubicam.  The greatest premium record of the decade had been initiated and sold by its old alumnus.
     “In the record business, if you are successful enough to sell fifty thousand records you immediately receive a certificate of recognition from the record company.  If you sell one hundred thousand copies you get a free lunch at the Waldorf Astoria as a guest of the president of the record company.  If you sell two hundred and fifty thousand records, the record company opens up all their files of available talent, and you can then go ahead and put together a truly incredible anthology for your next opus.  But if you sell a million records, you get a gold record — and very few gold records have ever been awarded in the premium record field.  Seven gold records have been awarded to our company for million record premiums.
     “Yet the memory of that gorilla still troubles me.  Whenever I visit a new city I always go to the zoo — to the gorilla cage, where I whistle ‘Where in the World’ — hoping, hoping, hoping that some day the co-star of ‘Hilarities’ will rise from his straw bed and beat his massive chest in the rekindling of his showbiz memories.”
     So, there we have it.  The story of the birth of Goodyear’s “Great Songs of Christmas” premium record series by Columbia Records told by the idea man himself.  Thank heavens for creative, imaginative people who “put carts before horses, and feeling before logic.”
     While Tale of the Blue Horse and Other Million Dollar Adventures is long out of print, you can find copies for purchase from various on-line merchants.  If you’re lucky, you might find a copy at your local library. The book is an engaging and entertaining account of the highly successful career of an independent thinker. 
Tale of the Blue Horse and Other Million Dollar Adventures., Stanley Arnold. Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J.  1968. 
This blog is written and published by DLF Music Transfer, LLC  dba Christmas LPs to CD.  For more information on Christmas music or to purchase CDs of classic Christmas records on CD, please visit our website www.christmaslpstocd.com , call us 888-384-6970, or e-mail us david@dlfmusic.com.


    

    

Some History of Premium Christmas Records

Goodyear’s Great Songs of Christmas Volume 6
Columbia Special Products.
Catalog #CSM388, CSS388
1966

The following is an article published in Billboard Magazine December 24, 1966, and written by Paul Ackerman and Claude Hale.  I found the background information regarding Christmas records such as the Goodyear Great Songs of Christmas and Firestone Your Favorite Christmas series to be quite interesting.  While many, many people truly enjoyed each of these series of music, few probably realize the impact the series’ success had on this portion of the record business. I hope you enjoy this article as did I.

“Brutal” Battle Flares for Premium Record Business
     The field of premium records — and the allied area of special recorded products such as audio-visual, religious, and educational records — has become “brutally competitive” and the year 1967 is likely to see even more action in this little-publicized area of disk business.  According to the Harry Fox Office, publisher’s agent and trustee, “the field is a big one and the majors are the chief factors in it.” To many labels, the premium field also has the attraction of being one of the few areas of the record industry where there is no credit risk whatever.  Stanley Arnold, head of Stanley Arnold and Associates, Inc., consultants who have been very important in developing the premium business, states:, “The first essential for success is a client with courage, imagination, and determination.”
     His clients include Goodyear, Standard Oil of New Jersey, National Cash Register, American Tobacco, United Airlines, and some thirty others. His firm is an “idea factory” for these giant corporations.  He has been instrumental in Goodyear’s use of premium records as a traffic builder and mover of Goodyear products.  Arnold stated that Goodyear’s premium record, “The Great Songs of Christmas,” produced annually for the past six years has sold approximately fifteen million at $1.00 each.  “People write in for back copies,” he said, “and as a merchandising device, it is effective over a long period.”
Requires Creativity
     Arnold explained that the premium field today requires people of creativity and original thought; it is not merely a matter of using recorded performances from the archives. Commenting on the Goodyear premium disk, made by Columbia, he stated, “A great deal of special recording is commissioned for such an album.  Recording teams were sent to England to record Barbra Streisand and Pablo Casals was flown in from Puerto Rico to participate.”
     Speaking of the potential of the premium record field, Arnold stated:, “The measure of success is in direct relation to the amount of imagination and creativity that can be harnessed to a particular project.”
     The emphasis on creativity is apparent in the personnel of Columbia’s Special Products department.  Headed up by vice-presidcent Al Shulman, this department has the services of Joe Carlton, veteran A&R executive.
Figures Unavailable
     No figures are available regarding the gross racked up by Columbia’s Special Products department in 1966, but it is estimated that the total approximates $8 million — most of which derives from premium records.  The label’s special products department not only has an A&R operation but also a very considerable sales force and an art department.  The sales force is reported at more than a dozen across the nation.
     In addition, there is a profit spillover to Columbia’s pressing division which presses the premium disks.
     There is some controversy as to the future of the premium field and allied fields.  A few say it really is not growing, but is merely becoming more competitive.  The majority of tradesters, however, forecast a sizeable growth for the next five years — perhaps as much as fifteen to twenty percent yearly.  There are various reasons for their faith in the latter view.  One is that federal funds for education are very large and this fact encourages the purchase of educational records and audio-visual materials.  A second is the growing belief in records as a traffic builder and mover of product over a long period.
 RCA Expansion
     RCA Victor Records, whose premium activities have been expanding every year, has just had its biggest sales year.  In the past year, the label has become involved in paving a new area for premiums — tape cartridges.  To date, the label provides at least three major automobile manufacturers with tape cartridges to use as courtesy gifts with the factory installation of cartridge units in their cars.  Victor’s premium activity is headed by Robert Clarkson.
     In the field full strength about five years, Victor has added to its premium staff each year and sees only continued growth for the premium business.  A current Christmas premium album featuring RCA Victor artists is being used as a customer draw in RCA Victor appliance dealers.
     At Victor, premiums have covered all types of music and the label, due to a catalog reaching back many, many years has been able to supply the unusual.  For example, one manufacturer wanted an album to tie in with 1927; RCA had recordings from this period in stock.
     The label feels that premiums, while bringing in a bonus business, is also invaluable publicity for artists.
Caps Mynatt
     Capitol’s Creative Products division manager, Harry Mynatt, sees 1967 as the premium industry’s biggest year.  Major users of premium records like Firestone and Goodyear have shown smaller manufacturers how effective premiums can be, he points out.
     Mynatt bases his optimism on the interest he has created from potential customers and from his mail.  “We haven’t scratched the surface of our catalog yet,” he said.  Mynatt is looking to broaden the use of premiums into  business other than Christmas.
     He flew to New York over the weekend to interview three candidates for a New York-based job with his department.  He will make his final decision this week.  This New York operation of the department follows growth in the field.
Decca’s Brennan
     Decca Records’ Claude Brennan said that the premium business had been growing for the firm, though he felt it was still a small part of the total operations of Decca: But, “Premiums have been good to us.”  Among the premiums turned out recently by Decca have been an LP for Eastern Airlines and a soundtrack of the “Rudloph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” TV special for General Electric.
MGM Active
     MGM Records has been active in premiums through Sales Plus, Inc., operated by Terry Philips.  One of the big items out by MGM now is a self-liquidating Christmas album being sold by banks around the nation who belong to the Christmas Club plan.  Other albums with major manufacturers and firms are in the works at MGM.
Pickwick International
     One of the pioneers in the field is Pickwick International.  S. Gordon Strenger, special sales manager and head of premiums, said, “For us, it’s the biggest year we’ve ever had.  The label has suppied products for firms ranging from Nestle’s decaffeinated coffee to Lustre Creme.”   Strenger said that while Pickwick works in many areas of the premium field, the biggest type of premium is the self-liquidator in which the LP is generally used as a traffic builder to bring customers into the store. The store often makes no money per se on this LP, but benefits from extra sales of other items.  The second type of premium that has been proven effective for Pickwick is the “dealer loader.”  In this the LP is used, for example, by manufacturers to get dealers to buy more product; if they buy an extra amount of goods, they get the LP as a bonus.
     One of the LPs Pickwick has out now as a premium is “Merry Christmas – A Joyous Album of Beloved Christmas Music,” featuring artists like Kate Smith and others.  Country Music has been one of the strongest premium properties of Pickwick on a Nationwide basis.
This blog is written and published by DLF Music Transfer, LLC  dba Christmas LPs to CD.  For more information on Christmas music or to purchase CDs of classic Christmas records on CD, please visit our website www.christmaslpstocd.com , call us 888-384-6970, or e-mail us david@dlfmusic.com.