Major Minor Records

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Major Minor Records was a record label started by Phil Solomon in 1966, the label had a distribution deal with Decca Records. Known artists on the label included The Dubliners and Johnny Nash.

Ultimately the label was bought by EMI.

Phil Soloman also managed Radio Caroline in the mid 60s. In August 1967 the Wilson government outlawed pirate radio and, although Radio Caroline continued, it started excessively promoting records from the Major Minor label. Caroline's DJs were unhappy with the type of music they were being forced to play and it is doubtful that much of the revenue from the record label actually went back into the radio station. In March 1968 the two Caroline ships were silenced when they were seized by debtors.

Major Minor's big chart moment came in 1969, when the label picked up a 'dropped' record and took it to no. 1 in the UK charts. The track, "Je t'aime... moi non plus" by Jane Birkin and Serge Gainsbourg, was originally released on Fontana. Despite being performed in French, the song's obvious sexual tone resulted in a widescale ban from mainstream radio stations, and Fontana deleted the single during its chart ascent, allegedly because the wife of Fontana's boss was appalled at her husband's company releasing such a song. Major Minor acquired the licensing rights, and got their best selling single on the back of the controversy.

Soul artists who recorded on the label included The Isley Brothers, Kim Weston and Cissy Houston.

Jazz artists who recorded on this label included The Jazz Hip Trio.

Rock artists included July and an obscure pre-10cc single featuring Eric Stewart called The New Wave Band ("Cecilia" b/w "Free, Free, Free").

Also a young Peter Sarstedt cut his first single there under the name Peter Lincoln called "My monkey is a junkie" the other big success was Northern Ireland's David McWilliams and "The Days of Pearly Spencer" this leased from EMI. Other tunes that Caroline had to play included "Sentimental songs" by Freddie "Parrotface" Davies "Sentimental songs".

Their first big UK number one single came in 1968 and was "Mony Mony" by Tommy James and the Shondells.

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