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By the end of the year Devlin's mesmerising live act, coupled with Warren and co-manager Graham Dent's hype and astute management, had pushed Devlin's fame to frenzied levels, never before seen in New Zealand, and then Warren re-recorded Lawdy Miss Clawdy in February 1959 and the floodgates burst. Nobody knows exactly how many singles were sold, Warren admitting openly in later years that the touted figure of 100,000 was perhaps somewhat exaggerated. Warren famously presented Devlin with a very large royalty cheque in public, only to take it back and rip it up when the cameras went. Whatever the sales were, it was an extraordinary and unique phenomenon in New Zealand, encouraging Prestige to issue New Zealand's first rock and roll album in 1959, simply called Johnny.Prestige, stimulated by Devlin, also released a handful of other rock and roll singles, the best probably being Vince Callaher, whose Moo Cow Boogie Blues was a fine rocker. Prestige also released several records by Carole Davies, a well-regarded pop singer of the day, but nothing approached Devlin for impact or sales.
In late 1959, after buying out Henderson, Phil Warren merged Prestige into the new Top Rank International set up in which he was a partner, (with cinema chain Kerridge Odeon and the UK Rank Organisation) although Prestige would remain a label in that group until 1961. Top Rank was renamed as Allied International in 1961 when EMI in the UK purchased the Rank Organisation, the partnership was short-lived however and Warren and Kerridge sold the company, including Prestige and all its licences to the NZ Pye Group subsidiary G. A. Wooller & Co. Ltd. (headed by George Wooller). Phil Warren's Prestige Promotions Ltd. retained the rights to the Devlin catalogue. Prior to the split several Warren produced records would appear on Top Rank and Allied International including the hit Kiss Of Fire by Kahu Pineaha in 1960. Phil Warren would return to the recording business in 1966, with his new company James Productions (a partnership with Jimmie Sloggett) releasing via Festival Records and other labels, but the Prestige name would never again appear on new recordings. |
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