De Wolfe Vinyl

Cult, Classic.


Spanning the decades from the late-1950s to the 1980s, the de Wolfe vinyl label is varied in its styles of music, with eclectic and highly original releases.
LPs in this collection have gained cult status among collectors and samplers, and feature music from a roster of composers including Ivor Novello, Pierre Arvay and Basil Kirchin. They also include performances from iconic musicians, such as Jimmy Page and Herbie Flowers, and have provided the soundtracks to films including Monty Python and The Holy Grail, The Witchfinder General, Dawn Of The Dead, and the Kung-Fu classics of the Shaw Brothers.
 

BROWSE VINYL

 

 

Staff favourites

HOT LICKSDWLP 3284
70s rock songs with vocal instrumental versions
BIG BEATDWLP 3285
Early 70s funky sounds with an eclectic twist
SEVENTH CHILD - MAJOR WILEYDWLP 3251
Early 70s folk songs with a soulful feel
CULT AND COLOURDWLP 3215
Cool, funky basslines and Easy Listening vibes
ELECTRIC BANANADWLP 3040
60s Rock Songs with Vocal and Instrumental versions
RYTHMESDWLP 3328
Percussion and drum-led fusion and grooves
GREAT DAYDWLP 3258
70s Easy Listening Pop Orchestral Sounds
HOGAN, THE HAWK AND DIRTY JOHN CROWNDWLP 3243
Super Cool and Funky 70s Drama
VOCAL SHADES AND TONESDWLP 3227
Barbara Moore's Groovy Vocal Cult Classic
TAKE ME TO THE MOUNTAINSDWLP 3109
Elegant folk with traditional and original songs featuring the voice of Susan Brown
The Cult of Library Albums

By Jonny Trunk of Trunk Records

My first encounter with library music was in a second hand record shop. It was in the early 1990s, and it was of immediate interest as it looked like no other record I’d seen before. When I got the LP home and put it on the record player I realised it was the kind of music I’d been listening out for - sort of interesting background jazz, like film music, a bit classical too, quite experimental too but ever-so-slightly different.

I started to look around for these LPs, and slowly began collecting them on the rare occasions they appeared in shops. I came across fellow collectors and slowly started to build up a detailed knowledge about the composers, the styles, the music and the early labels.

The most interesting and diverse, both in terms of sounds and sleeve art was the de Wolfe label. They employed some serious talent and issued sublime jazz, incredible urban soundscapes, comedy cues, amazing electronic experiments and many of the classic TV sounds I’d grown up with. 

Much of the artwork was left to a graphic man by the name of Nick Bantock. Heaven knows what his influences were, but his inspired collages and magpie style of design seemed to fit the incredible music like a glove.

I became so enthralled by the whole music library world I made a book (published in 2007), simply called The Music Library where, I’m pleased to say, the number of sleeves issued by de Wolfe outweighs any of the other 100 or so library companies I discovered. Three decades on from my first library LP find and I’m still hooked, still looking out for classic de Wolfe library music I’ve still not found.

 

Jonny Trunk is a writer, broadcaster, and DJ as well as the owner and founder of Trunk Records