Marmalade Records

Marmalade Records was a short-lived British independent record label (distributed by Polydor). Started by Swiss-resident Georgian pop impresario and ex-manager of both the Rolling Stones and the Yardbirds Giorgio Gomelsky in 1966, it released records by artists including Julie Driscoll and Brian Auger and The Trinity, who jointly reached No.5 in the UK in 1968 with This Wheel's on Fire and Blossom Toes, as well as early recordings by Graham Gouldman, Kevin Godley and Lol Creme, who became 10cc. Marmalade's first release was in August 1966; a controversial single called "We Love The Pirate Stations" by five well-known musicians masquerading as The Roaring Sixties who were mainly members of the Ivy League, who later went on to release hits as The Flower Pot Men. "We Love The Pirates" was not

Marmalade Records

Marmalade Records was a short-lived British independent record label (distributed by Polydor). Started by Swiss-resident Georgian pop impresario and ex-manager of both the Rolling Stones and the Yardbirds Giorgio Gomelsky in 1966, it released records by artists including Julie Driscoll and Brian Auger and The Trinity, who jointly reached No.5 in the UK in 1968 with This Wheel's on Fire and Blossom Toes, as well as early recordings by Graham Gouldman, Kevin Godley and Lol Creme, who became 10cc. Marmalade's first release was in August 1966; a controversial single called "We Love The Pirate Stations" by five well-known musicians masquerading as The Roaring Sixties who were mainly members of the Ivy League, who later went on to release hits as The Flower Pot Men. "We Love The Pirates" was not