# Move Records

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{{Short description|Australian independent record label}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2014}}
{{Use Australian English|date=October 2014}}
{{More citations needed|date=August 2008}}
{{Infobox record label
| name        =  Move Records
| image       = Move_Records_logo.svg
| image_size  = 200px
| founded     = {{start date|1968|12|24}}<ref name="AMC2019">{{cite web |title=50 years of Move Records |url=https://www.australianmusiccentre.com.au/article/50-years-of-move-records |website=Australian Music Centre |date=16 May 2019 |access-date=7 May 2026}}</ref>
| founder     = Martin Wright
| status      = Active
| genre       = [Classical](/source/Classical_music), [jazz](/source/jazz), [world](/source/World_music)
| country     = Australia
| location    = Melbourne, Victoria
| url         = {{URL|www.move.com.au}}
}}

'''Move Records''' is an Australian independent record label founded in Melbourne in 1968 by Martin Wright.<ref name="About">{{cite web |title=About Move Records |url=https://www.move.com.au/about |website=Move Records |access-date=7 May 2026}}</ref><ref name="AMC2025">{{cite web |title=Listen Out: Move Records |url=https://www.australianmusiccentre.com.au/article/listen-out-move-records |website=Australian Music Centre |date=17 June 2025 |access-date=7 May 2026}}</ref> The label specialises in classical music, particularly recordings by Australian performers and composers, and has also released jazz, soundtrack and other specialist titles.<ref name="Aus Culture">{{cite web | archiveurl = https://webarchive.nla.gov.au/awa/20100503235500/http://pandora.nla.gov.au/pan/21007/20100504-0955/www.culture.gov.au/wsd/2245.html | url = http://www.culture.gov.au/wsd/2245.html | title = Website Details: Move Records | publisher = Australia's Culture Portal ([Government of Australia](/source/Government_of_Australia)) | archivedate = 3 May 2010 | accessdate = 3 April 2017 }}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref>

==History==
Move Records grew out of ''Move Two Mix'', an LP of modern church music produced by Wright at Bill Armstrong Studios in South Melbourne while he was working at Melbourne's Presbyterian Bookroom.<ref name="AMC2019" /><ref name="Move25">{{cite magazine |last=Hughes |first=Juliette |title=MOVE 25: Australian Classical CD label reaches its 25th year |magazine=4MBS Classic FM Magazine |date=May 1994}}</ref>

In its early years the label issued religious and folk material, licensed some overseas recordings, and gradually moved into location recording in Melbourne venues including St Patrick's Cathedral, Ormond College and the University of Melbourne Conservatorium.<ref name="AMC2019" /><ref name="MD3450">{{cite web |title=About Move Records |url=https://www.move.com.au/about |website=Move Records |access-date=7 May 2026}}</ref> In 1973 Move released ''Reverberations'', described in later accounts as the first LP of Australian organ music, with Douglas Lawrence performing works by Keith Humble, Felix Werder, Ron Nagorcka and Ian Bonighton.<ref name="AMC2019" /><ref name="25thAnniv">{{cite magazine |title=Move Celebrates 25th Anniversary |magazine=The Melburnian |date=December 1994 |page=52}}</ref>

During the 1970s the label broadened into early music and jazz, including releases by La Romanesca and Tony Gould.<ref name="AMC2019" /><ref name="NonTroppo">{{cite magazine |last=Scott |first=Andrew |title=A slow but steady mover |magazine=ABC Radio 24 Hours |date=January 1999}}</ref> Nick Alexander left the company at the end of the 1970s, after which Wright remained the central figure in the label's operations.<ref name="MD3450" />

The label was an early adopter of digital recording methods. Later summaries of its history note the use of Beta video tape, DAT, Sound Designer II and Pro Tools, as well as the transition from LP to compact disc after local CD manufacturing began in 1987.<ref name="MD3450" /> Wright said in 1993 that the shift to compact disc left Move with large stocks of unsold vinyl, much of which had to be given away.<ref name="PressForSuccess">{{cite news |last=Vincent |first=Jeremy |title=Small recording labels aim to press for success |work=The Australian |date=23 December 1993}}</ref>

Move built a dedicated studio at Eaglemont in the early 1990s for classical acoustic recording.<ref name="AMC2019" /><ref name="Heidelberger">{{cite news |title=30 years: quite a record |work=Heidelberger |date=5 August 1998}}</ref> Vaughan McAlley joined the label in the mid-1990s as a recording engineer and music editor.<ref name="MD3450" />

In 2025 the Australian Music Centre described Move as "Australia's longest-running independent classical music label".<ref name="AMC2025" /> Its 50th anniversary was marked by the release of ''Move 50'', a compilation of 24 new works by Australian composers.<ref name="AMC2019" />

== Artists ==

Composers include Julian Yu, [George Dreyfus](/source/George_Dreyfus), [John Sangster](/source/John_Sangster), Eve Duncan, [Percy Grainger](/source/Percy_Grainger), Mark Clement Pollard, [Brenton Broadstock](/source/Brenton_Broadstock), [Tony Gould](/source/Tony_Gould), [Peter Sculthorpe](/source/Peter_Sculthorpe), [Cezary Skubiszewski](/source/Cezary_Skubiszewski), David Joseph, [Marshall-Hall](/source/Marshall_Hall_(musician)), [Nigel Westlake](/source/Nigel_Westlake), [Carl Vine](/source/Carl_Vine), [David Chisholm (composer)](/source/David_Chisholm_(composer)), [Larry Sitsky](/source/Larry_Sitsky), Kanako Okamoto, [Andrew Ford](/source/Andrew_Ford_(composer)), Andrew Byrne, [Thomas Reiner (composer)](/source/Thomas_Reiner_(composer)), [Christian Heim](/source/Christian_Heim)  and others.

Classical artists include [Michael Kieran Harvey](/source/Michael_Kieran_Harvey), [Douglas Lawrence](/source/Douglas_Lawrence), Elizabeth Anderson, John O'Donnell, Jocqueline Ogiel, La Romanesca, Robert Ampt, [Gerald English](/source/Gerald_English), Genevieve Lacey, Peter Carroll-Held, Ian Holtham, Miwako Abe, Ronald Farren-Price, Ian King, Sonny Chua, re-sound, Amy Johansen, [Norman Kaye](/source/Norman_Kaye), Collusion and others.

Jazz artists include [Tony Gould](/source/Tony_Gould), [Bob Sedergreen](/source/Bob_Sedergreen), Keith Hounslow, [John Sangster](/source/John_Sangster), Emma Gilmartin, Ted Vining, the Alan Lee/Jo Abbott Quartet, Debra Blaquiere, and others.

== Soundtracks ==
The label has also released soundtracks of Australian films; the best known is ''[Japanese Story](/source/Japanese_Story)''. Ambient and World Music artists include Dean Frenkel, [Le Tuan Hung](/source/Le_Tuan_Hung) and Ros Bandt. The label has specialised in recording classical pipe organs, many of which have great historical interest. These have included the bamboo organ in [Manila](/source/Manila), the [Sydney Opera House](/source/Sydney_Opera_House) organ, [Melbourne](/source/Melbourne_Town_Hall) and [Sydney Town Hall](/source/Sydney_Town_Hall) organs, and many smaller instruments from the German-settled [Barossa Valley](/source/Barossa_Valley) in [South Australia](/source/South_Australia), and gold-rush [Ballarat](/source/Ballarat%2C_Victoria) area of [Victoria](/source/Victoria_(Australia)).

== See also ==

* [List of record labels](/source/List_of_record_labels)
* [Australian classical music](/source/Australian_classical_music)

== References ==

{{Reflist}}

==External links==
* {{official website}}

{{Authority control}}

Category:Australian independent record labels
Category:Record labels based in Melbourne
Category:Classical music record labels
Category:Jazz record labels
Category:Soundtrack record labels
Category:1968 establishments in Australia
Category:Record labels established in 1968

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article [Move Records](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Move_Records) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Move_Records?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
