Peter Pan Records


Peter Pan Records is an American record label specializing in children's music. The label was introduced to the public in March 1948. The label was owned by the Synthetic Plastics Company of Newark, New Jersey until the 1970s.
The label became one of the largest and most successful children's specialty record labels in America, manufacturing releases that often contrasted with those of its competitors. Peter Pan enjoyed its greatest success as a children's label during the 1950s. Many of their most famous releases were issued on 78-RPM 7- and 10-inch records, and on 45-RPM 7-inch records. Both songs and stories were released. Releases credited a variety of performers, including Dick Edwards with the Peter Pan Chorus and Orchestra, the Caroleer Singers, the Peter Pan Players and variations on these titles.
The label was notable for its series of book-and-record sets, combining an illustrated storybook with a vinyl record that contained music and narration by "your Peter Pan Storyteller". Others featured a repertory company of actors performing the stories as audio dramas. Bugs Bunny and the Looney Tunes characters, Popeye the Sailor Man, Huckleberry Hound, The Flintstones, Yogi Bear, Bozo the Clown, the superheroes of DC and Marvel, Conan the Barbarian, G.I. Joe, Scooby-Doo, Casper the Friendly Ghost, and later Betty Boop, Inspector Gadget, the robots of Robotech, the ThunderCats, and the SilverHawks were among the characters and stories featured in these sets. Peter Pan also produced original stories, most of them based upon TV and film franchises such as The Six Million Dollar Man, Space: 1999, Star Trek: The Original Series, Kojak, and Planet of the Apes. Another original title was The Amazing Adventures of Holo-Man, whose publication did not last beyond its introductionary issue. In the 1970s, many of these properties were released by its subsidiary label Power Records.
One of its most successful releases was Santa Claus is Coming to Town, an original production by Peter Pan's studio collective, that featured remakes of classic Christmas holiday songs, original songs for the album, and portrayals of Santa Claus and Mrs. Claus.
Also notable was the company's run of Irwin the Disco Duck albums, which featured popular songs of their time and were aimed at children, with the title character acting as a DJ.
Peter Pan Records was spun off into its own entity, Peter Pan Industries. In 1986, the company created Parade Video as a home-video division, as well as Peter Pan Video and Ambassador Video later in the line. In the late 1980s, while keeping its primary asset alive, Peter Pan Industries branched into music releases not aimed at the children's market.
The company changed its name to PPI Entertainment of Newark, New Jersey, and established new label divisions and imprints, including Rohit International Records, a budget label from the 1980s and 1990s that specialized in reggae.
In 2006, PPI Entertainment Group changed its name yet again to Inspired Studios, based in West Palm Beach, Florida.