Warner-Spector Records
Defunct record label
Warner-Spector Records was a record label formed on October 12, 1974 as an outlet for Phil Spector productions by Warner Bros. Records. The label lasted for three years. Except for a new single by Cher, "A Woman's Story",[1] and a Dion album, Born to Be with You, which was released only in the United Kingdom, all the releases on Warner-Spector were reissues of product from Philles Records, the label Phil Spector had co-founded in 1962.
See also
References
- ^ Billboard - Google Books. 1974-10-19. Retrieved 2014-08-01.
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Phil Spector
produced
- Twist Uptown
- He's a Rebel
- A Christmas Gift for You from Phil Spector
- Presenting the Fabulous Ronettes
- Just Once in My Life
- River Deep – Mountain High
- Let It Be
- All Things Must Pass
- John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band
- The Concert for Bangladesh
- Imagine
- Living in the Material World
- Some Time in New York City
- Rock 'n' Roll
- Born to Be with You
- Death of a Ladies' Man
- End of the Century
- Season of Glass
- Silence Is Easy
produced
1960– 1963 |
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1964– 1966 |
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1967– 2003 |
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- Menlove Ave.
- Back to Mono (1958–1969)
- "To Know Him Is to Love Him"
- "Don't You Worry My Little Pet"
- "Chapel of Love"
- "I Can Hear Music"
- "Little by Little"
- "Spanish Harlem"
- "This Could Be the Night"
- Philles Records
- Phi-Dan Records
- Phil Spector International
- Warner-Spector Records
- "B Boy Baby"
- "Take Me Home Tonight"
- Tearing Down the Wall of Sound
- Phil Spector
- Category
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