Prestige Record company and label
The company was established in 1949 in New
York by Bob Weinstock, and
quickly embarked upon an ambitious program of recording many famous young
musicians of the day. The catalogue included mainstream jazz, bop, cool jazz,
and hard bop by such musicians as Gene Ammons, Wardell Gray, Miles Davis, Thelonious
Monk, Sonny Rollins, Stan Getz, John Coltrane, and many others; some recordings
were issued on a subsidiary label, New Jazz. In the 1950s many sessions were
recorded by Rudy Van Gelder at his studio in Hackensack
(later in Englewood Cliffs), New Jersey.
In 1960 the company began to diversify, setting up new labels: Swingville (to put out material from a growing catalogue of
mainstream jazz by older musicians); Moodsville (to
release muted, atmospheric recordings by swing and bop musicians); and Bluesville (a blues label). Artists and repertory were
supervised by Weinstock, though others, including
Chris Albertson, Ozzie Cadena, Ira Gitler, Bob Porter, and Don Schlitten,
were also involved with the catalogue at various times. From the late 1950s
until the late 1970s Prestige was chiefly associated with soul jazz, issuing
recordings by Brother Jack McDuff, Groove Holmes,
Shirley Scott, and Johnny Hammond with various tenor saxophonists. In 1967 the
company transferred its headquarters to Bergenfield,
New Jersey; in May 1971 it was acquired by
Fantasy, which ran the catalogue and label from its base in Berkeley,
California.
The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, © Macmillan Reference Ltd
1988