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Olivia Records

Olivia Records is a women's music record label founded in 1973 by lesbian members of the Washington D.C. area.[1] It was founded by Ginny Berson, Cris Williamson, Meg Christian, Judy Dlugacz, and six other women.[2] Olivia Records sold more than one million records and produced over 40 albums during its twenty years of operation.[2]

Olivia Records Inc.
Parent companyOlivia
Founded1973 (1973)
StatusCalifornia corporation since 1975
Genrewomen's music
Country of originUnited states

History edit

A separate lesbian feminist movement emerged in the 1970s that reacted to the discrimination of women within the gay rights and counterculture movements, and to the heteronormativity that was embedded in the 1960s US feminist movement.[3] Women's music labels such as Olivia contributed to a 1970s lesbian sub-culture by providing a public platform for the expression of topics that were lacking in dominant political discourse, and helped consumers develop strategies to cope, organize, and articulate their experiences.[4] Cris Williamson encouraged the Olivia collective to use an independent music label as an economic base for lesbian social organizing.[1]

Foundation edit

First called the "Olivia Collective," the group that founded the record label named itself and the label after the heroine of a novel by Dorothy Bussy, who fell in love with her headmistress at French boarding school.[5] The heroine and the novel were both called Olivia. The founders—Cris Williamson, Meg Christian, Judy Dlugacz, and seven other women—borrowed $4,000 to form the record label.[6]

Christian and Williamson were the two best-selling artists signed to Olivia Records. In 1973, the collective released a 45 record with Christian's song "Lady" on one side and Williamson's "If It Weren't for the Music" on the other.[7][8] The single sold for $1.50, plus mailing costs.[8] Yoko Ono responded and said that she wanted to do a side project with Olivia, but the collective politely declined.[citation needed] Without making themselves dependent on any high-profile person, they made $12,000 with the single, which was enough to release Christian's first album, I Know You Know in 1974, and a year later, Williamson's groundbreaking album The Changer and the Changed.[9] I Know You Know sold over ten thousand copies in its first year, and eventually sold over 70,000 copies for Olivia Records,[4][10] while The Changer and the Changed became one of the top-selling albums on any independent label.[4][10]

Move to California edit

In 1974, Judy Dlugacz (president), Meg Christian, Ginny Berson, Jennifer Woodhul, and Kate Winter relocated the company from Washington D.C. to California.[11] But Olivia's business philosophy ultimately contributed to financial problems and internal conflicts among staff and artists contributed to its restructuring and ultimate demise.

Olivia Records echoed the philosophy cultural production of lesbian feminist separatists. But although Olivia Records claimed to benefit all women, the business was primarily led and promoted the interests of white middle-class American lesbians.[12] In the late 1970s, Olivia expanded in inclusivity by promoting the music of African American artists Linda Tillery, Mary Watkins and Sweet Honey in the Rock.[2] In 1977, after repeated criticism by Anita Bryant, Olivia put out Lesbian Concentrate, a collection of songs and poetry with part of the proceeds going to benefit the Lesbian Mothers National Defense Fund. Included on the 13 track LP was Meg Christian's "Ode To A Gym Teacher" and Sue Fink's "Leaping Lesbians".[citation needed]

Sandy Stone was Olivia's sound engineer from ca. 1974-1978, recording and mixing all Olivia product during this period. She resigned as the controversy over her working for a lesbian-identified enterprise increased because she was a transgender woman.[13][14][15][16]

Decline edit

Following a sold-out tenth-anniversary best-of concert at Carnegie Hall in New York City, Olivia's idealist and inexperienced business practices led to significant financial hardship. Meg Christian left the record label in 1984.[11] Olivia moved first to Los Angeles to stay on top of the burgeoning music scene and then to Oakland. The remaining five women of the collective, who had been pooling their money and even living together for the previous seven years, began to disperse. Olivia stopped putting out new records and instead performed a series of 15th anniversary concerts in 1988. The two 15th-anniversary concerts at Carnegie Hall were the largest grossing concerts at that venue in its history.[17] In 1988, the record label restructured and morphed into a broader women-centered social business venture resulted in the branding of Olivia, a lesbian travel company.[2][11][18]

Even though Olivia Records released world music and salsa records, it was most successful with acoustic solo acts, although sometimes it failed to identify mainstream talent. In 1985, singer/songwriter Melissa Etheridge, then a struggling Los Angeles artist, sent her demo to Olivia, but was ultimately rejected. Etheridge went on to become one of the most popular female performers of the 1990s and arguably the most successful lesbian musician of all time. She saved the rejection letter, signed by "the women of Olivia," which was featured in Intimate Portrait, the Lifetime Television documentary of her life.

Unable to reinvent itself for the changing musical landscape for women, from riot grrrl to Lilith Fair to Ani DiFranco, Olivia could no longer sustain itself as a record label.[18]

Philosophy edit

Olivia Records promoted music that validated women's and lesbian's experiences, including lyrical and musical expressions of love, anger, fear, and humor.[12] Lyrics by artists on Olivia Records frequently described personal or local problems rather than address global women's issues. Fans bonded to the musicians and to each other, thus forming women-centered musical communities.[10] Early interviews with the founders of Olivia Records show an acute awareness of the radical political message embedded in the very creation of the label. In an August 1974 interview about the creation of Olivia Records, Ginny Berson, Meg Christian, Judy Dulgacz, Cyndi Gair and Helaine Harris described the label as a new national women's recording company.[19] In this interview, Meg Christian described Olivia Records as a form of lobbying, and Judy Delgacz directly tied the label to the broader women's movement. Ginny Berson explained their vision for women to gain social power and capital by creating alternative economic institutions that would enable women to control their own economic situation. She identified the fastest way to eliminate oppressive/discriminating/harassing workplaces as by employing women, promoting women, and investing women's money in women.[19]

The economic philosophy and business operations that differentiated Olivia Records from mainstream records reflected the idealistic hopes of its founders, and the label's executives revelled in experimenting with unknown artists and inexperienced producers.[19] As an independent label, Olivia Records cultivated a fan base through music festivals, coffee houses and bookstores, and mail order catalogs. Similar to women's music festivals, Olivia Records favored apprenticeship and mentoring as staple organizational practices.[18][20] The founders of Olivia Records were not the only LGBTQ activists to criticize American capitalism or consumerism, and many subculture bars, bookstores, coffee shops, and presses were created to carve out physical and intellectual queer spaces in the American marketplace.[21] The DIY aesthetic of Olivia Records mirrored broader trends that proliferated in the American lesbian arts and counter-marketplace during the 1970s and 80s, including the rejection of mass-production and big corporations in favor of crafts, folk art, and preindustrial production techniques.[20] Similarly, lesbians were valuing alternative forms of commerce, including gifting and trading.[2][21] Lesbians were reclaiming handmade objects and domestic products, and the rise of acoustic folk music was an offshoot of all of these trends.[21]

Impact edit

Cris Williamson and Judy Dlugacz were awarded the 2018 Jack Emerson Lifetime Achievement Award for Executive by the Americana Music Association.[22]

Artists edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Dolan, Jill. "Feeling Women's Culture: Women's Music, Lesbian Feminism, and the Impact of Emotional Memory". Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism. Spring 2002: 205–219.
  2. ^ a b c d e Hayes, Eileen (2010). Songs In Black and Lavender: Race, Sexual Politics, and Women's Music. University of Illinois Press.
  3. ^ Jay, Karla; Young, Allen, eds. (1979). Lavender Culture (First Jove/HBJ ed.). Jove. ISBN 9780515044621. LCCN 79-106206. OCLC 5100420.
  4. ^ a b c Slominski, Tes (2015). "Doin' Time with Meg and Cris, Thirty Years Later: The Queer Temporality of Pseudonostalgia". Women and Music: A Journal of Gender and Culture. 19: 86–94. doi:10.1353/wam.2015.0025. S2CID 191443563.
  5. ^ Lillian Faderman, Odd Girls and Twilight Lovers: A History of Lesbian Life in Twentieth-Century America, Penguin Books Ltd, 1991, page 221. ISBN 0-231-07488-3
  6. ^ "Olivia: If It Weren't For The Music". Lesbian News. December 27, 2012. Retrieved April 1, 2019.
  7. ^ "May 2008 - Olivia Records".
  8. ^ a b The Women of Olivia (August 1974). "Olivia". Amazon: A Feminist Journal. Milwaukee, Wisconsin. 3 (4): 2. LCCN 98-93306. OCLC 39846420.
  9. ^ Lesbian News. Jan2006, Vol. 31 Issue 6, p22-23. 2p.
  10. ^ a b c Peraino, Judith (2005). Listening to the Sirens Musical Technologies of Queer Identity from Homer to Hedwig. University of California Press. p. 169.
  11. ^ a b c Goldin-Perschbacher, Shana (November 2013). "Olivia". Grove Music Online. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.A2267398 – via Oxford Music Online.
  12. ^ a b Rodnitzky, Jerome L. (2008). "Songs of sisterhood: The music of women's liberation". Popular Music and Society. 4 (2): 77–85. doi:10.1080/03007767508591074.
  13. ^ Sayer, Susan (October 1, 1995). "From Lesbian Nation to Queer Nation". Hecate. Retrieved October 3, 2012.
  14. ^ Raymond, J. (1994). The Transsexual Empire (2nd ed.). Teachers College Press. The second edition includes a new foreword that describes her anti-trans work after the publication of her thesis project as the first edition in the late 70s.
  15. ^ Williams, Cristan (August 16, 2014). "TERF hate and Sandy Stone". Retrieved August 3, 2021.
  16. ^ Riedel, Samantha (October 17, 2019). "Gen(d)erations: How Sandy Stone "Struck Back" Against Transmisogyny". Retrieved August 3, 2021.
  17. ^ Holden, Stephen (November 28, 1988). "Review/Music; Female Artists' Tribute To Record Company". The New York Times. Retrieved August 22, 2010.
  18. ^ a b c Love, Nancy Sue (Fall 2002). "Singing For our Lives: Women's Music and Democratic Politics". Hypatia: 71–94 – via Project MUSE.
  19. ^ a b c Berson, Ginny, Meg Christian, Judy Dlugacz, Cyndi Gair, and Helaine Harris (August–September 1974). "the muses of olivia: our own economy, our own song". Off Our Backs. 4 (9): 2–3 – via JSTOR.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  20. ^ a b Morris, Bonnie (June 2015). "Olivia Records: The Production of a Movement". Journal of Lesbian Studies. 19 (3): 290–304. doi:10.1080/10894160.2015.1026699. PMID 26075684. S2CID 205753708 – via Taylor & Francis.
  21. ^ a b c Murray, Heather (May 2007). "Free for All Lesbians: Lesbian Cultural Production and Consumption in the United States during the 1970s". Journal of the History of Sexuality. 16 (2): 251–275. doi:10.1353/sex.2007.0046. PMID 19244670. S2CID 9416941 – via JSTOR.
  22. ^ "Olivia Records' Judy Dlugacz and Cris Williamson to Receive Americana Jack Emerson Lifetime Achievement Award for Executive". Americana Music. July 15, 2018. Retrieved April 1, 2019.

Further reading edit

  • Comprehensive Radio Documentary and Discography from Queer Music Heritage
  • Holden, Stephen (November 4, 1983). "Olivia Records is a Success in 'Women's Music'". New York Times. p. C00016.
  • Liveten, Sharon (May 14, 1988). "Olivia Records, a Healthy Gain in 15 Years". LA Times.
  • Morris, Bonnie J. (March 30, 2018). "How Should We Archive the Soundtrack to 1970s Feminism?". Smithsonian.com.
  • Berson, Ginny Z. (2020). Olivia on the Record. Aunt Lute Books. ISBN 978-1-951874-01-8.

olivia, records, women, music, record, label, founded, 1973, lesbian, members, washington, area, founded, ginny, berson, cris, williamson, christian, judy, dlugacz, other, women, sold, more, than, million, records, produced, over, albums, during, twenty, years. Olivia Records is a women s music record label founded in 1973 by lesbian members of the Washington D C area 1 It was founded by Ginny Berson Cris Williamson Meg Christian Judy Dlugacz and six other women 2 Olivia Records sold more than one million records and produced over 40 albums during its twenty years of operation 2 Olivia Records Inc Parent companyOliviaFounded1973 1973 StatusCalifornia corporation since 1975Genrewomen s musicCountry of originUnited states Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation 1 2 Move to California 1 3 Decline 2 Philosophy 3 Impact 4 Artists 5 References 6 Further readingHistory editA separate lesbian feminist movement emerged in the 1970s that reacted to the discrimination of women within the gay rights and counterculture movements and to the heteronormativity that was embedded in the 1960s US feminist movement 3 Women s music labels such as Olivia contributed to a 1970s lesbian sub culture by providing a public platform for the expression of topics that were lacking in dominant political discourse and helped consumers develop strategies to cope organize and articulate their experiences 4 Cris Williamson encouraged the Olivia collective to use an independent music label as an economic base for lesbian social organizing 1 Foundation edit First called the Olivia Collective the group that founded the record label named itself and the label after the heroine of a novel by Dorothy Bussy who fell in love with her headmistress at French boarding school 5 The heroine and the novel were both called Olivia The founders Cris Williamson Meg Christian Judy Dlugacz and seven other women borrowed 4 000 to form the record label 6 Christian and Williamson were the two best selling artists signed to Olivia Records In 1973 the collective released a 45 record with Christian s song Lady on one side and Williamson s If It Weren t for the Music on the other 7 8 The single sold for 1 50 plus mailing costs 8 Yoko Ono responded and said that she wanted to do a side project with Olivia but the collective politely declined citation needed Without making themselves dependent on any high profile person they made 12 000 with the single which was enough to release Christian s first album I Know You Know in 1974 and a year later Williamson s groundbreaking album The Changer and the Changed 9 I Know You Know sold over ten thousand copies in its first year and eventually sold over 70 000 copies for Olivia Records 4 10 while The Changer and the Changed became one of the top selling albums on any independent label 4 10 Move to California edit In 1974 Judy Dlugacz president Meg Christian Ginny Berson Jennifer Woodhul and Kate Winter relocated the company from Washington D C to California 11 But Olivia s business philosophy ultimately contributed to financial problems and internal conflicts among staff and artists contributed to its restructuring and ultimate demise Olivia Records echoed the philosophy cultural production of lesbian feminist separatists But although Olivia Records claimed to benefit all women the business was primarily led and promoted the interests of white middle class American lesbians 12 In the late 1970s Olivia expanded in inclusivity by promoting the music of African American artists Linda Tillery Mary Watkins and Sweet Honey in the Rock 2 In 1977 after repeated criticism by Anita Bryant Olivia put out Lesbian Concentrate a collection of songs and poetry with part of the proceeds going to benefit the Lesbian Mothers National Defense Fund Included on the 13 track LP was Meg Christian s Ode To A Gym Teacher and Sue Fink s Leaping Lesbians citation needed Sandy Stone was Olivia s sound engineer from ca 1974 1978 recording and mixing all Olivia product during this period She resigned as the controversy over her working for a lesbian identified enterprise increased because she was a transgender woman 13 14 15 16 Decline edit Following a sold out tenth anniversary best of concert at Carnegie Hall in New York City Olivia s idealist and inexperienced business practices led to significant financial hardship Meg Christian left the record label in 1984 11 Olivia moved first to Los Angeles to stay on top of the burgeoning music scene and then to Oakland The remaining five women of the collective who had been pooling their money and even living together for the previous seven years began to disperse Olivia stopped putting out new records and instead performed a series of 15th anniversary concerts in 1988 The two 15th anniversary concerts at Carnegie Hall were the largest grossing concerts at that venue in its history 17 In 1988 the record label restructured and morphed into a broader women centered social business venture resulted in the branding of Olivia a lesbian travel company 2 11 18 Even though Olivia Records released world music and salsa records it was most successful with acoustic solo acts although sometimes it failed to identify mainstream talent In 1985 singer songwriter Melissa Etheridge then a struggling Los Angeles artist sent her demo to Olivia but was ultimately rejected Etheridge went on to become one of the most popular female performers of the 1990s and arguably the most successful lesbian musician of all time She saved the rejection letter signed by the women of Olivia which was featured in Intimate Portrait the Lifetime Television documentary of her life Unable to reinvent itself for the changing musical landscape for women from riot grrrl to Lilith Fair to Ani DiFranco Olivia could no longer sustain itself as a record label 18 Philosophy editOlivia Records promoted music that validated women s and lesbian s experiences including lyrical and musical expressions of love anger fear and humor 12 Lyrics by artists on Olivia Records frequently described personal or local problems rather than address global women s issues Fans bonded to the musicians and to each other thus forming women centered musical communities 10 Early interviews with the founders of Olivia Records show an acute awareness of the radical political message embedded in the very creation of the label In an August 1974 interview about the creation of Olivia Records Ginny Berson Meg Christian Judy Dulgacz Cyndi Gair and Helaine Harris described the label as a new national women s recording company 19 In this interview Meg Christian described Olivia Records as a form of lobbying and Judy Delgacz directly tied the label to the broader women s movement Ginny Berson explained their vision for women to gain social power and capital by creating alternative economic institutions that would enable women to control their own economic situation She identified the fastest way to eliminate oppressive discriminating harassing workplaces as by employing women promoting women and investing women s money in women 19 The economic philosophy and business operations that differentiated Olivia Records from mainstream records reflected the idealistic hopes of its founders and the label s executives revelled in experimenting with unknown artists and inexperienced producers 19 As an independent label Olivia Records cultivated a fan base through music festivals coffee houses and bookstores and mail order catalogs Similar to women s music festivals Olivia Records favored apprenticeship and mentoring as staple organizational practices 18 20 The founders of Olivia Records were not the only LGBTQ activists to criticize American capitalism or consumerism and many subculture bars bookstores coffee shops and presses were created to carve out physical and intellectual queer spaces in the American marketplace 21 The DIY aesthetic of Olivia Records mirrored broader trends that proliferated in the American lesbian arts and counter marketplace during the 1970s and 80s including the rejection of mass production and big corporations in favor of crafts folk art and preindustrial production techniques 20 Similarly lesbians were valuing alternative forms of commerce including gifting and trading 2 21 Lesbians were reclaiming handmade objects and domestic products and the rise of acoustic folk music was an offshoot of all of these trends 21 Impact editCris Williamson and Judy Dlugacz were awarded the 2018 Jack Emerson Lifetime Achievement Award for Executive by the Americana Music Association 22 Artists editMargie Adam Gwen Avery Alicia Bridges Joanna Cazden Meg Christian Casse Culver Dianne Davidson Sue Fink Tret Fure Kay Gardner Judy Grahn Barbara Higbie Leslie Ann Jones BeBe K Roche Deidre McCalla June Millington Pat Parker Woody Simmons Linda Tillery Lucie Blue Tremblay Teresa Trull Robin Tyler Nancy Vogl Mary Watkins Cris WilliamsonReferences edit a b Dolan Jill Feeling Women s Culture Women s Music Lesbian Feminism and the Impact of Emotional Memory Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism Spring 2002 205 219 a b c d e Hayes Eileen 2010 Songs In Black and Lavender Race Sexual Politics and Women s Music University of Illinois Press Jay Karla Young Allen eds 1979 Lavender Culture First Jove HBJ ed Jove ISBN 9780515044621 LCCN 79 106206 OCLC 5100420 a b c Slominski Tes 2015 Doin Time with Meg and Cris Thirty Years Later The Queer Temporality of Pseudonostalgia Women and Music A Journal of Gender and Culture 19 86 94 doi 10 1353 wam 2015 0025 S2CID 191443563 Lillian Faderman Odd Girls and Twilight Lovers A History of Lesbian Life in Twentieth Century America Penguin Books Ltd 1991 page 221 ISBN 0 231 07488 3 Olivia If It Weren t For The Music Lesbian News December 27 2012 Retrieved April 1 2019 May 2008 Olivia Records a b The Women of Olivia August 1974 Olivia Amazon A Feminist Journal Milwaukee Wisconsin 3 4 2 LCCN 98 93306 OCLC 39846420 Lesbian News Jan2006 Vol 31 Issue 6 p22 23 2p a b c Peraino Judith 2005 Listening to the Sirens Musical Technologies of Queer Identity from Homer to Hedwig University of California Press p 169 a b c Goldin Perschbacher Shana November 2013 Olivia Grove Music Online doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article A2267398 via Oxford Music Online a b Rodnitzky Jerome L 2008 Songs of sisterhood The music of women s liberation Popular Music and Society 4 2 77 85 doi 10 1080 03007767508591074 Sayer Susan October 1 1995 From Lesbian Nation to Queer Nation Hecate Retrieved October 3 2012 Raymond J 1994 The Transsexual Empire 2nd ed Teachers College Press The second edition includes a new foreword that describes her anti trans work after the publication of her thesis project as the first edition in the late 70s Williams Cristan August 16 2014 TERF hate and Sandy Stone Retrieved August 3 2021 Riedel Samantha October 17 2019 Gen d erations How Sandy Stone Struck Back Against Transmisogyny Retrieved August 3 2021 Holden Stephen November 28 1988 Review Music Female Artists Tribute To Record Company The New York Times Retrieved August 22 2010 a b c Love Nancy Sue Fall 2002 Singing For our Lives Women s Music and Democratic Politics Hypatia 71 94 via Project MUSE a b c Berson Ginny Meg Christian Judy Dlugacz Cyndi Gair and Helaine Harris August September 1974 the muses of olivia our own economy our own song Off Our Backs 4 9 2 3 via JSTOR a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Morris Bonnie June 2015 Olivia Records The Production of a Movement Journal of Lesbian Studies 19 3 290 304 doi 10 1080 10894160 2015 1026699 PMID 26075684 S2CID 205753708 via Taylor amp Francis a b c Murray Heather May 2007 Free for All Lesbians Lesbian Cultural Production and Consumption in the United States during the 1970s Journal of the History of Sexuality 16 2 251 275 doi 10 1353 sex 2007 0046 PMID 19244670 S2CID 9416941 via JSTOR Olivia Records Judy Dlugacz and Cris Williamson to Receive Americana Jack Emerson Lifetime Achievement Award for Executive Americana Music July 15 2018 Retrieved April 1 2019 Further reading editComprehensive Radio Documentary and Discography from Queer Music Heritage Holden Stephen November 4 1983 Olivia Records is a Success in Women s Music New York Times p C00016 Liveten Sharon May 14 1988 Olivia Records a Healthy Gain in 15 Years LA Times Morris Bonnie J March 30 2018 How Should We Archive the Soundtrack to 1970s Feminism Smithsonian com Berson Ginny Z 2020 Olivia on the Record Aunt Lute Books ISBN 978 1 951874 01 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Olivia Records amp oldid 1172872908, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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