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Music World |
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First Name![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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![]() Entrepreneur Hoghton Hughes |
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Music World - a musical phenomenon launched in Christchurch by Hoghton Hughes circa 1967 |
![]() Garner Wayne and His Saddle Pals |
![]() Here's Lynne Toner |
![]() Noel Parlane - Old Time Country Music |
In 1979, Music World branched into Australia and Hoghton Hughes followed in 1985, leaving his Hawdon Street, Sydenham base, first for Queensland and later northern New South Wales, and in 1992 Music World's annual turnover peaked at around $15 million. Twice, Music World LPs took out the Golden Guitar for top selling album at the Australasian Country Music Awards in Tamworth. The albums, One Day At A Time by Suzanne Prentice in 1983 and Yodelling Man by Roger Tibbs in 1986, were both produced by Hughes. The catalogue of 3000 albums is now part of Hughes's music licensing operation The Music Factory, which he ran from Lennox Head, licensing to Asian companies and granting sync rights to movie producers. Despite the sheer number of albums sold and the many local artists who benefited from having product released on the label, Hughes and Music World were never afforded the accolades they perhaps should have been. Hughes believes it was because he was not among "the finger snappers" at the glamour end of the New Zealand record business, initially in Wellington and then in Auckland. That, and the fact Music World was a budget label - more often than not their albums were in the $2.99 and $4.99 price range and they were offered to retailers 100% sale or return. Some artists moved huge numbers, but some did not. Danny McGirr's Kiwi Singalong and Suzanne Prentice's gospel LP One Day At A Time were massive, Lynne and Celine Toner's solo records sold little due to their not venturing far from their Hawke's Bay base. |
![]() The Sailor Boy Label |
![]() Brendan Dugan - On Studio One |
![]() Music World promoting Brendan Dugan |
![]() The Master Label |
On a trip to Australia in 1966 he secured the New Zealand rights to Melbourne labels W&G and Spotlight and when he returned to Christchurch he set up the Sailor-Boy Label. The first single was the local issue of Judith Durham's W&G 45 'Just A Closer Walk With Thee', but the second was a Christchurch teenager soon to be a household name. Hughes heard 15-year-old Brendan Dugan singing at Caroline Bay in Timaru in 1967 and offered to record him. Believing Dugan had the potential to follow in his hero John Hore's [John Grenell] footsteps, Hughes produced Dugan's debut single 'Flowers For Mama' b/w 'Have I Told You Lately That I Love You'. The following year, Hughes folded Sailor-Boy, but he took Dugan with him when he started his next label Master; named for his mate and Invercargill promoter Frank Stapp's propensity for calling everybody "master". There were several more Brendan Dugan singles and the album Country's Greatest on Master before Dugan won the national 1968 New Faces title on NZBC Television show Studio One and was snapped up by HMV. Hughes repackaged four tracks from Country's Greatest into the EP Brendan On Studio One. He kept his eyes and ears open for New Zealand talent to add to the Master roster. He heard Danny McGirr singing live on 3ZB, a Dunedin buyer recommended Christine Smith, while pop singer Pat Kearns was working at Begg's when Hughes changed his name to Mark Antony and released four singles through 1969 and 1970. It was while standing in a queue at the Sydenham Post Office in 1970 that Hughes had an epiphany. He was behind a woman who was sending a letter to the sensationalist English paper News Of The World. ". He thought - what a great title, and played around with the wording - thus Music World was born. Master existed for another four years until being absorbed into the new Music World Label. |
![]() Hoghton Hughes and Danny McGirr |
![]() Suzanne Prentice - publicity shot |
![]() Hoghton Hughes and Christine Smith |
![]() Music World Budget Release |
![]() Hoghton Hughes ... time on |
![]() Suzanne Prentice - Music World Release |
One of Hoghton Hughes' most enduring discoveries was Suzanne Prentice, whose Country Girl was released on Master in 1973 when she was just 14. Country Style Promotions partner Stewart Abernethy, who had earlier encouraged Hughes to sign Max McCauley, gave him the tip on Prentice. Within Music World, Hughes set up other subsidiary labels to cater for different genres. Among them, he released Christian music on Trinity, children's product on Kiddidisc, television-advertised product on Golden Editions, and pop music on Mirage. The idea with the latter was that the records had a better chance at radio without the stigma of being on the budget Music World Label. Sometimes his artists would ask him to manage their careers, but Hughes was too busy putting out records. He believed Danny McGirr could have become a New Zealand Johnny Cash but the singer didn't have the ambition, and he wished he'd recorded more of elderly Ashburton pianist Chloe Gordon, whose potential to move product was huge. Twelve Australian sales reps soon joined Music World's four New Zealand reps when Music World expanded into Australia in 1979. PolyGram's Graham Broughton managed the Australian business until Hughes relocated there in 1985. Before crossing the Tasman he moved Music World to Auckland and installed Ross Donohue to look after the New Zealand operation. Hoghton Hughes and his wife Vanessa first settled in Brisbane before moving to Lennox Head, in the Northern Rivers region of New South Wales. Today, he is still "the ultimate Elvis Presley freak, the world's oldest teenager". His Music World LPs of the 1970s and 1980s are staples in provincial New Zealand second-hand shops and all over online auction sites for upwards of $30, all the while with their $4.99 removable sticker in plain sight. |
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