Tradition Records

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Tradition Records was an American record label that existed from 1955 to 1961.

The label was founded (and funded) by Diane Hamilton. It may have started as a non-commercial exercise but once The Clancy Brothers were signed up in 1958, it generated profits. When the group signed to Columbia in 1961, the label ceased to be viable, and the catalogue was sold, possibly to Transatlantic. In the 80s "Everest Records" acquired the rights. Their policy was to issue recordings without any notes, in haphazard permutations. Later Rykodisc bought the rights, and issued several recording under the "Tradition" logo. Some of these were actually from the Everest catalogue. The history is cloudy, but Dizzy Gillespie, Erroll Garner, Coleman Hawkins and Jimmy Witherspoon almost certainly never recorded for Tradition, though recent issues would suggest they did.

For many years John Jacob Niles received little acclaim, but following the broadcast of the Bob Dylan documentary No Direction Home, there was a surge in the demand for his albums. His two albums on "Tradition" were accordingly reissued.

[edit] Selected Tradition Records releases

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