TURNING
POINT
The colorful past and promising future of United Record Pressing
By Michael
McCall
United Record Pressing is America’s most historic vinyl-record plant.
In 1949, United helped usher in the classic age of pop songs when it pressed
the world’s first 7-inch, 45 rpm single for RCA. From then on, United
stood at the center of the sounds -- rock ‘n’ roll, pop and country
included -- that transformed America and the world.
Now URP wants to re-acquaint music lovers with the one-of-a-kind pleasures of
vinyl recordings, so the company has launched GAS Records to celebrate the pure-analog,
anti-digital experience.
These are just the guys to do it, too. Their company has pressed some of the
most important and best-loved popular music ever created. Elvis Presley, Frank
Sinatra, Dolly Parton, James Brown, The Supremes and Alabama are just a few
of the millions of stars who called on United to put their music on vinyl for
the world to enjoy.
From
the 1950s through the 1970s, United worked around the clock to press vinyl records
for the biggest stars and hottest newcomers in the entertainment industry. Now
United wants to use its expertise and its one-of-a-kind equipment to recreate
the experience of vinyl recordings for the 21st Century music fans.
Today, vinyl holds a special significance for those who grew up in the heyday
of classic rock, soul and country music. Some of the greatest music of all-time
was first heard on vinyl, often on a platter pressed by United. There’s
several reasons United is held in such high esteem by artists and record companies:
In a highly specialized business, it has the most experience and the most expertise
of anyone working in the vinyl business.
United’s 27,000-square-foot plant in Nashville features state-of-the-art
presses built and maintained by world-recognized experts with a background and
knowledge unmatched in the industry. United doesn’t just supply U.S. artists
and record companies with the best quality vinyl pressings available anywhere.
Their international business spans the globe, with regular shipments to Japan,
Germany, Jamaica and many other foreign countries.
The reason is simple: You can’t find a better quality pressing plant in
the world, nor can you find better guides to the vinyl experience than Cris,
Ozell and James. It’s time for your family to experience the quality and
memories that United’s top-quality vinyl pressings can provide.
Once a year, Shoei Go travels to Nashville from her home in Osaka, Japan. She
comes here because she's in the music business, but she isn't peddling country
records. Even so, Music City is home to one of her primary business suppliers,
United Record Pressing. Never mind the fact that most locals could care less
about a vinyl record manufacturing plant located in an industrial zone south
of downtown. For Go, it's something of a pilgrimage, a chance to meet the people
who do thousands of dollars of work for her. Why she comes, and why she chooses
to do business with a pressing plant halfway around the world, speaks volumes
about this small, quiet, yet richly historic Nashville enterprise.
With a history stretching back 50 years, United stands at the center of the
Nashville record business, a cog in the Music Row machine that has been every
bit as important as WSM radio, the Grand Ole Opry, Decca Records, Tree Publishing,
and BMI. But its tale has rarely been told, mostly because it's a company built
on engineering ingenuity rather than famous names or classic hits.
The records pressed in the plant include some of the most important and best-known
popular music ever created, including landmark works by Eddy Arnold, Elvis Presley,
Slim Harpo, Stevie Wonder, Lionel Richie, and The Judds. But United's daily
business isn't very glamorous. It's a small factory, a place where the rubber
meets the road--or more correctly, where the music meets the vinyl. For decades,
it marked the last step of the lengthy creative process that brought popular
music to millions of listeners.
As it turned out, the peak period for vinyl coincided with the heyday of American
popular music, a time when the best rock 'n' roll, the best rhythm-and-blues,
and much of the best country music was made. For this reason, the medium holds
a special sentimental significance for those baby-boomers who grew up listening
to Elvis Presley, James Brown, and Loretta Lynn on 45 rpm singles and 33 1/3
rpm LPs.
That's not true for the young record buyers of today. With the advent of compact
discs and now the Internet, everything has changed. As such, United could be
seen as a dinosaur, one of the last holdouts of a dying breed. But there are
those who think there's still plenty of life in this lumbering, old-fashioned
way of documenting music. Vinyl may never play the central role that it once
held, but there are those who believe it will last as a boutique business, serving
a specialty market that loves the sound and even the feel of vinyl. What's more,
the 12-inch disk is still very much a part of current, cutting edge music, crucial
to hip-hop performers, dance-club deejays, and turntable artists, all of whom
depend on vinyl to create their art.
There's no denying that business has changed enormously for those in the record-pressing
industry. But while many plants have simply ceased operation in the last decade,
United has been undergoing some major transitions, including new investors and
a new ownership arrangement. By all indications, it's one of the few remaining
independent vinyl plants in America outfitting itself for the future.
That future will be drastically different from the past. Where United once regularly
received press-run orders of 150,000 to 300,000 for one hit single from RCA
or Motown, today the company exists largely on runs of 2,000 disks or less.
But the new owners, in partnership with veteran United executives and employees,
believe there's a way for United to flourish amidst the evolving market conditions
of the music business.
"It's a far more complex business than it once was, and in truth the principals
of the company, who are all in their 70s, didn't want to deal with the transitions
taking place," says Cris Ashworth, who became United's new president on
Jan. 1. "They're dealing with a lot more jobs with a lot fewer units ordered.
It's also become an international business, so there are also language issues
to deal with, and time issues and transportation issues. And then there's the
Internet as well."
United's new international customer base has no better representative than Shoei
Go, who runs a record label specializing in underground rock and avant-garde
noise albums. Ever since she started her label in 1994, the young Japanese businesswoman
has made a point of putting music on vinyl as well as CDs. Her choice is aesthetic
as much as it is financial.
"In some underground scenes in Japan, they prefer vinyl to CDs," says
Go, who works with the renowned Japanese rock band The Boredoms, among others.
"They like it for many reasons. It sounds different. Also, it's rare, and
it's cute. It has a bigger jacket, and that is important for some artists."
Japan has only two vinyl pressing plants--one for 7-inch records, another for
12-inch discs. "They are very expensive," Go says. "It is a lot
cheaper for me to press records in the United States, even with the shipping
costs." A former New York resident, she found out about United through
American friends who were involved with independent labels. She surveyed several
different people about where they had their records pressed, and each of them
suggested the same plant: United Record Pressing in Nashville.
That was three years ago, and Go has been a steady customer ever since. Not
only that, she has expanded her business by becoming a broker for other labels
and artists who want to utilize vinyl. Nowadays, her company, Japan Overseas,
receives shipments of several thousand singles and LPs every two weeks from
United. "I like to work with United because they are very prompt,"
Go explains. "They always deliver on time, and that's very important in
Japan."
A company that once took calls from legendary U.S. record men like Col. Tom
Parker, Berry Gordy, and Chet Atkins now finds itself deciphering orders from
Japan, Brazil, Jamaica, and Germany. But that's only part of the changing climate
for United's business. As both the company's longtime executives and the new
management recognize, it's time for United to stop sitting back and waiting
for orders to come in. To stay in business, they need to let the world know
what they do and how well they do it.
Until now, United banked wholly on its reputation; even the foreign companies
who discovered the plant found it by word of mouth. But with Ashworth at the
helm, United is prepared to start a new marketing and advertising campaign aimed
at calling attention to its capabilities and its reputation.
A well-traveled executive with a reputation for expanding a company's bottom
line, as well as a veteran of the international marketplace, Ashworth plans
to make United a more prominent presence both internationally, nationally, and
even locally. United may stay small and family-oriented as far as its staff
is concerned, but no longer will it be a quiet industry player. Ashworth's plan
is to make both Nashville and the rest of the world familiar with the work his
plant does.
The history of United goes back to 1949, the year RCA Victor issued the first
45 rpm record--a competitive move that came only months after Columbia had introduced
the 33 1/3 rpm, long-
playing
album. That year, John Dunn opened Nashville's first seven-inch pressing plant,
then called Southern Plastics. By the mid-'50s, when the 45 and the LP replaced
the 78 as the recording formats of choice, Southern Plastics found its services
in demand. Through all kinds of developments in the music business, the company
stayed busy for decades.
Given that it's the 50th anniversary of the 45--and of the plant itself--it's
fitting that United is undergoing some of the most significant changes it has
seen in decades. With Dunn's passing in 1998, remaining partners Ozell Simpkins
and Joe Talbot decided it was time to look to the plant's future. The 71-year-old
Simpkins, who built the Chestnut Street plant and personally designed its machines,
had been acting president for more than three decades. Talbot, now 70, had been
a United officer and treasurer since the mid-'60s.
"Me and Joe felt it was a good time to bring in some new people,"
Simpkins says.
Through a local banking contact, they found businessman J. Crispin "Cris"
Ashworth, who had a history of joining large companies and expanding their net
worth and their business holdings. The son of a former British diplomat and
an MBA graduate of Vanderbilt University's prestigious Owen School of Business
Management, Ashworth has played a key role in the growth of several local businesses.
He worked as chief financial officer at Nashville Gas in the '70s, helping complete
its merger between Tennessee Natural Resources and Piedmont Natural Gas. In
the '80s, he was president of Advantage Industries and helped the corporation
take its Worldcom long distance company public in 1989. In 1992, he moved to
New Jersey to become chief financial officer for Medical Economics, the company
best known for publishing the Physician's Desk Reference. During the five years
Ashworth worked for the company, it grew from a $125 million firm to a $400
million enterprise, thanks largely to acquisitions in Latin America and Europe.
After he returned to Nashville two years ago, Ashworth worked for two health-care
companies, Envoy and Princeps. It was at this point that a friend alerted him
to the possibilities of getting involved with United.
"When I walked through the front door, it was love at first sight,"
he relates. "What I loved was the history of the business, and the types
of people who work at United. Beyond that, a real commitment has been made by
the owners and the employees to make this business continue to prosper. There's
a real family feeling inside this building, and there's also this real affection
that people have toward vinyl. It's a piece of American history, but it's also
something that can continue to play a real role in the entertainment industry."
Ashworth didn't buy the business simply because it had sentimental value. He
did some investigating before he got involved. "As a market, the vinyl
business has declined significantly," he says. "But, in my opinion,
the shakeout within the industry had hit the floor. No one was making presses
anymore, and most of the plants that were going to shut down had done so. Now
there's only a handful of plants left, and those that are left are profitable.
Then I noticed that there was renewed interest in vinyl by a new generation
of consumers."
As Ashworth paged through hi-fi magazines and industry publications, he noticed
a flurry of stories on turntables and on the comparative value of CDs versus
vinyl records. Most of all, he noticed stories about how some music fans were
turning back to vinyl. Darren Fulton, the buyer for the vinyl department at
Nashville's Tower Records, supports Ashworth's belief that a solid niche market
remains for LPs and 12-inch singles. Like most stores, Tower eliminated vinyl
from its sales floor in the early '90s. But interest from consumers brought
vinyl back into the store two years ago.
A self-professed vinyl fan, Fulton predicts that vinyl will likely outlast the
CD as a musical medium. "As everything goes to a purely electronic format,
with people downloading their music from the Internet, there will still be vinyl
records. There's a satisfaction you get from an LP that's not there with a CD.
Vinyl is more aesthetically pleasing." Echoing Go's observations, he points
out that a record gives the listener something to hold onto and to look at--something
downloadable music won't be able to provide in the same dimensions.
Current industry statistics confirm that there is a renewed, if limited, demand
for vinyl. After falling off the cliff in the '80s, vinyl sales figures have
slowly begun to claw themselves back into view. According to the Recording Industry
Association of America, vinyl now represents 1.14 percent of the market, up
from 0.3 percent in 1993. That may not seem like much, but 1 percent of a multibillion-dollar
business can add up--to an estimated $85 million a year in the United States.
In Europe and Japan, the percentage of the market is even larger.
"People are going back to vinyl because of its unique qualities,"
Ashworth says. "Vinyl has a unique sound, a very pleasing sound. I can
play you a CD of a song and the vinyl version of the same song, and nine times
out of 10 you'll prefer the vinyl. It's a warmer, richer sound. Digital can
transmit extreme highs and extreme lows. Vinyl cannot get to those extremes,
but those limitations provide an opportunity for a very unique, very human sound."
With only four major plants operating independently in the States, it's easy
to see why Ashworth believes there's a sizable niche market for United Record
Pressing. Moreover, the three other leading independent plants all have owners
who are in their 70s or older. In a graying business, Ashworth, at age 48, is
the new kid on the block. Although he skirts the issue now, it's evident that
he has his sights on eventually absorbing other U.S. plants into the United
fold.
"There are people who think I'm crazy when I say this, but there are a
lot of opportunities in the vinyl business," he contends. "And there's
not another place that has the people and the experience that United has. My
job is to sell what makes United so unique: This plant has a uniquely qualified
staff, and there's not another place that can compete with that. No one can
make records with the kind of consistency and quality that United offers."
Much of that quality comes from people like Ozell Simpkins, a legendary figure
in the vinyl trade because of his understanding of the manufacturing process.
In the early '60s, John Dunn sent Simpkins, an electrical engineer by profession,
to Brussels, Belgium, where the most modern plant and most efficient presses
in the world then existed.
Simpkins spent two months learning everything he could, then returned to Nashville
to design a steam-powered record pressing production line of his own. Located
at 453 Chestnut St., around the corner from Greer Stadium, the 27,000-square-foot
plant is a one-of-a-kind facility, from the steam boilers in the basement to
the vinyl pellet silos on the roof.
Out front, the building's fading facade features a checkerboard of pastel tiles
that marked the place as a hip, progressive establishment several decades ago.
Inside, the reception area and front offices are all wood paneling and shiny
vinyl flooring (naturally), while the casual mishmash of overstuffed files and
music-biz artwork suggests that this is an office designed for comfort rather
than flash.
For the most part, the building probably doesn't look any different than it
did 30 years ago, when Dolly Parton was still a 34-C and her initial RCA singles--"We'll
Get Ahead Someday," "In the Good Old Days (When Times Were Bad)"--were
being pressed in the rear of the factory. What has changed, however, is that
the records are now pressed by automated machines instead of the old, manual
machines, which were much more dangerous and prone to mistakes. In 1972, along
with colleague Bill West, Simpkins personally designed these presses, which
flatten 12-inch disks with 100 tons of pressure and seven-inch 45s with 50 tons
of pressure.
The presses sit in the back of the building, where the nitty-gritty work is
accomplished in two long, rectangular rooms--one for 45s, the other for 12-inches--and
a central packing room. The presses line the long concrete floors like so many
big-shouldered soldiers--tall, foursquare, green metal machines that huff steam
and clang metal, their intricately moving parts pushing and sliding the heated
vinyl through its steps with imperturbable military precision.
As
the clamorous sounds suggest, the presses are quite violent. But the delicate
touch of the workers removing the finished wax from the spindles implies that
the product of this violence is art--or at least some form of personal expression.
Simpkins also is responsible for what's known as the United Hilton. On the second
floor of the plant, across from the board room, is a fully furnished apartment.
Still filled with vintage '60s furniture, the three-room apartment, complete
with a stocked kitchen, was designed to give black record executives a comfortable
place to stay when they traveled to Nashville to conduct business with United.
Among United's biggest customers were such legendary record labels as Detroit's
Motown and Chicago's Vee Jay Records.
"In those days, there wasn't a decent hotel in Nashville that would let
a black person stay there," Simpkins says, shaking his head. "So we
built a real nice apartment upstairs so there'd be a nice place for our customers
to stay if they needed it." The apartment also played host to the occasional
party: Hank Williams Jr. celebrated his 16th birthday there, and a young Wayne
Newton toasted the release of his first album with a shindig there.
Simpkins, who has been responsible for switching the boilers each morning for
more than three decades, can tell plenty of stories about United's history.
One of his favorites involves bluesman Slim Harpo, creator of such classics
as "I'm a King Bee" and "Rainin' in My Heart." "Slim
was living in Nashville in the '60s," Simpkins remembers. "One day
he called and asked if I could deliver a test pressing to his house. The song
was 'Baby, Scratch My Back,' which ended up being a pretty big hit for him.
Well, I drove over there, over off Jefferson Street, and he had a house that
was hardly fit to live in. Now, I knew Slim Harpo, and I knew he was making
some pretty good money. I mean, I knew how many records we were pressing, and
it was a lot.
"So when I got there, I said, 'Slim, let me ask you something. I know you
got all kinds of money. Why do you live like this?' He said, 'Young man, you
cannot live in an ivory tower with a silver spoon in your mouth and sing the
blues. I live where my people are. I feel what they feel, and I see what they
see.' Well, I always thought that was a real wise statement there."
Simpkins often gets ribbed by his coworkers about the time Frank Sinatra called.
One day in the '60s, he picked up the phone, and a deep voice bellowed, "Hello,
this is Frank Sinatra!" As he recalls, "Guys in the music business
were always playing pranks back then, so I didn't believe it for a second. So
this guy tells me he's Frank Sinatra, and I said, 'Well, no shit! I'm Napoleon
Bonaparte!' That just made him mad. He screamed, 'Goddamn it, I am Frank Sinatra!'
I probably said something else smart, and then he hung up."
Simpkins remembers the days when United sometimes got so busy that it operated
24 hours a day, 7 days a week, stamping out 1.5 million discs a month. He also
remembers the heyday of such big-selling Motown artists as Stevie Wonder, Diana
Ross, and Marvin Gaye. The plant's last single-artist bonanza came from Lionel
Richie, who hit a hot streak with a string of platinum- and gold-selling singles
from 1981 to 1986. Right up to the dawn of the CD age, United was in the thick
of it.
Used to be, Simpkins says, he operated on a first-name basis with nearly all
of United's clients. With the number of orders coming in now, that's no longer
the case. "It's not a handshake business anymore," he sighs. Working
with smaller, independent record labels can have its headaches. Simpkins laughs
as he recalls the Tampa-based buyer who ordered 2,000 records on credit, leaving
only a minimum deposit. Payment was due within 30 days, but the guy kept ignoring
past-due statements, until he finally paid his bill nine months later.
Some time later, the same customer personally showed up at the front desk to
deliver the master recording for his next pressing. When he requested credit
and was denied, he asked to speak to Simpkins, who explained to the customer
that he couldn't get credit since he hadn't paid his first bill on time. The
customer, however, protested: He'd sent the money exactly 30 days after selling
the last record from the previous order.
For the most part, though, Simpkins enjoys the new international flavor of United's
business. He gives Shoei Go a fatherly hug whenever he sees her, and he speaks
fondly of the Jamaican caller who eventually grew into one of the company's
biggest clients. Seems Jamaica's only 45 pressing plant had closed without telling
anyone, leaving customers scurrying about for another place to order records.
"About the only thing I could make out was when he said, 'We need some
records done in a hurry, mon,' " Simpkins recalls. "He had such a
heavy accent, I couldn't understand him, and he couldn't understand me. But
we got it worked out, and he told all the other Jamaican record companies about
us. Now we're doing a significant percentage of our business from Jamaica and
from Japan."
Indeed, on any given day, the plant will be pressing records from all over the
world, by all types of artists. One morning a few weeks ago, United was pressing
45s by female Jamaican singer Lady Saw, Martina McBride, Big Star, Jason Falkner,
and a hip-hop band called Underground Resistance. Across the hall, the machines
were stamping out a German techno 12-inch single on red vinyl.
The plant's 12-inch capabilities represent one new aspect of United, which for
decades only pressed 45s. When he bought United, Ashworth worked out a deal
with Dixie Record Pressing, another Nashville-based record plant that was winding
down its business. United contracted with Dixie to service the company's existing
customer base; it also hired several technical staff members from Dixie and
purchased the company's 12-inch automated pressing machines--which were designed
and built by Simpkins.
The move appears to have been a savvy one. In January, United pressed 10,000
LPs. In March, it plans to send out more than 50,000.
As Ashworth points out, 7-inch records and 12-inch records constitute totally
different markets. Independent bands tend to favor 45s, since underground-music
fans remain among the core consumers of new singles. Major-label artists, meanwhile,
have their singles pressed on vinyl to reach the more than 300,000 vinyl jukeboxes
still in service. Because CD jukeboxes require a significant investment, many
bars and restaurants are holding onto their vinyl machines, but they still want
the latest hits--which explains why Martina McBride's next single, "Whatever
You Say," was on the presses recently.
Twelve-inch singles, on the other hand, are a vital part of urban and dance
music. Rappers, hip-hop artists, and turntablists depend on the thick, swirling
curves of 12-inch records to create the scratching technique central to their
music. Likewise, club deejays find 12-inches easier to manipulate, sync, and
blend--which keeps the music pumping and the dance floor full.
Every day, there's a culture clash of sorts taking place at United, as men like
Ashworth and Simpkins supply the goods for all-night raves, gay dance clubs,
and the punk underground. But the United chieftains don't pass judgment on their
clients. Instead, as they give tours of the plant to East Coast thrash bands,
West Coast hip-hoppers, Rastafarian toasters, and Teutonic techno-freaks, they
display a laissez-faire attitude, the sort of understanding that comes with
being a broker of global pop culture.
"We know each one of these records we produce is very, very important to
the people who created it and who gave it to us," says George Ingram, president
of Nashville Record Productions. His business, located next door to United,
turns master recordings into lacquers and then into metal plates, which in turn
mash formless molten blobs of vinyl into records. "Some of it might sound
like noise to me, but I don't judge it. We do the best we can with it, because
we know how much it's going to mean to the people we send it to. No matter how
long you've been doing this, you know the thrill someone gets when they first
hold a record that they've had a part in creating."
That process, turning instruments and voices into recorded material, is a mystery
to most people. The colorful nature of how records get pressed--an amazing process
that seems as archaic as a factory scene from a novel by Dickens or Dos Passos--has
fueled a dream of Ashworth's: to create an experience where tourists and the
general public can tour through the plant and view the creation of vinyl records.
"I was always very impressed by how Jack Daniel's approached communicating
the distilling and bottling of its products," he says. "I think United
also has a history that needs to be communicated, so one of my thoughts is to
open up the plant and create a Jack Daniel's type of tour experience. It's a
very interesting process, and very few people actually understand how records
are made. Besides, because of how Ozell designed this facility, there are some
very unique features to this building and this plant. There's a lot of history
here, and it should be shared."
Part of Ashworth's enthusiasm for his plant is savvy marketing--after all, if
tourists go home talking about their visit to a real-life record plant, it helps
spread the word that United is the place to go for anyone wanting LPs and 45s.
But part of his excitement comes from genuine romance--he's obviously caught
up in the idea of dealing in something as nostalgic and as magical as records.
How many businessmen could say the same for window sashes, or garden hoses,
or Tupperware?
A few weeks ago, when Shoei Go paid her annual visit to the plant, Ashworth
was brimming with his typical ardor. As Go pulled out one of her business cards--a
miniature paper replica of a 45--and handed it to another United visitor, the
owner grabbed it from the visitor's hand. "Is this you?" Ashworth
exclaimed. "I love this! I'm going to have to get a card like this.
"Is that OK?" he asked. "Would it be OK if I copy this? I absolutely
need to use this. I've been looking for the right card, and I kept putting it
off because I didn't have the right idea yet. But this is it. This is what I
need--a business card shaped like a record. That would say it all."