Herman Lubinsky | |
---|---|
Born |
Branford, Connecticut, United States |
August 30, 1896
Died | March 16, 1974 Newark, New Jersey, US |
(aged 77)
Nationality | American |
Occupation | Music executive, record label owner, radio station owner |
Years active | 1922–1974 |
Known for | Founder of Savoy Records |
Herman Lubinsky (born Hyman Lubinsky, 30 August 1896 – 16 March 1974) was an American radio station and music business executive who founded Savoy Records in New York City in 1943.
Lubinsky was born in Branford, Connecticut, the son of Fannie (née Rosinsky, 1865–1941) and Louis Lubinsky (also known as Leuvinsky, 1857–1921), both of whom had emigrated from Russia in 1883. By 1915, he was working as an electrical contractor in New Haven, before serving as a radio operator in the US Navy.
In 1922, Lubinsky founded The Radio Shop of Newark, in Newark, New Jersey, and in 1923 set up a radio station, WRAZ, which changed its title to WCBX and then, in October 1924, to WNJ. The station operated from the attic of Lubinsky's home before its studio in Newark opened in 1925. The station became known as "The Voice of Newark" and presented programmes for immigrants to the New York metropolitan area in Polish, Lithuanian and Italian. In 1929 Lubinsky set up the Radio Investment Co., but in November 1932 his application to renew the license for WNJ was refused by the Federal Radio Commission because he refused to accept limits on the station's bandwidth. Lubinsky fought the action in the courts, but the station was taken off the air in March 1933.
Lubinsky then started the United Radio Company, which sold and repaired radios and phonographs and began selling records. Encouraged by his friend Eli Oberstein, a music business executive, he and record producer Ozzie Cadena set up Savoy Records in 1942. The company released jazz recordings made before the Petrillo Ban came into effect and also recordings made by musicians attempting to circumvent the ban by recording under pseudonyms. Among the latter was Bonnie Davis, whose recording of "Don't Stop Now" reached number 1 on the R&B chart in 1943. By 1944, the label had begun to release records by leading jazz musicians, such as Ben Webster and Lester Young, and over the next few years its roster of musicians expanded to include Charlie Parker, Dexter Gordon, Erroll Garner, Miles Davis, Paul Williams, and Brownie McGhee, among many others.