Concord Records Buys Fantasy Records - Heres one merger that should be a positive move for jazz fans and audiophiles: Concord Records, which began 31 years ago as a small jazz label in Concord, California issuing recordings from the Concord Jazz Festival, has merged with Fantasy Records of Berkeley, California, and the new entity will be called The Concord Music Group. Since moving to Southern California Concord has expanded, issued many multichannel SACDs, struck a deal Starbucks Hear Music, and had great success with their recent Ray Charles Duets disc. Fantasy - who got their start recording Dave Brubeck, Cal Tjader, and Vince Guaraldi - owns probably the worlds largest and most important catalog of jazz, blues and rock, and has been reissuing high-quality remasters from such great jazz labels as Prestige, Contemporary, Riverside, Milestone, Galaxy and Stax/Volt. They have been reissuing a series of classic jazz in stereo SACD format. Their financial viability was assured by Creedence Clearwater Revival - one of the most successful rock n roll bands of all time. And the award-winning film Amadeus is their property.
Fantasys President Ralph Kaffel stated ...my primary concern was that the acquiring entity should have the proper understanding and respect for the treasure that we are turning over to them, and be willing to perpetuate the historical legacy these catalogs represent...My colleagues and I are convinced the Fantasy catalog is in very good hands. Norman Lear is one of the owners of The Concord Music Group.
DISH Systems Buys VOOM - Cablevision Systems struggling satellite business, called Rainbow DBS but promoted as the hi-def-focused VOOM service, has been sold to satellite competitor EchoStar, which does business as DISH systems. Charles Dolan founded both Cablevision and HBO and he had hoped to make VOOM his third media sensation by offering many more HDTV channels than either of the other two video satellite services. But the service, which started in 2003, still has only 26,000 subscribers and Dolans son felt it was a financial black hole and outvoted his father to sell it to EchoStar for $200 million in cash. EchoStar said it would continue to provide service to VOOM customers during the transition but didnt say what would happen after that. EchoStar also got VOOMs ground facility in Blackhawk, S.D. and federal licenses to build and operate 11 new frequency channels.
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