Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Becoming Elektra: The True Story Of Jac Holzman’s Visionary Record Label

Rate this book
“Jac Holzman had a beautiful label called Elektra Records. They put out Judy Collins, Tim Buckley, The Doors, and Love. He dressed mod and he treated us very gently. He was a civilized man. He obviously loved the arts, but what he really wanted to do was build his business – and he did. He had his own concerns, and style, and you had to serve them, and of course when he sold out, as all indies do, you were stranded culturally in the hands of a cold clumsy conglomerate. But he put us in the right studios with the right producers and he tried to get us seen in the right venues and it really helped. This is a good example of the industry.”
—IGGY POP, John Peel Lecture, 2014

BECOMING ELEKTRA tells the incredible true story of the pioneering Elektra Records label and its far-sighted founder, Jac Holzman, who built a small folk imprint into a home for some of the most groundbreaking, important, and enduring music of the rock era.

Placing the Elektra label in a broader context, the book presents a gripping narrative of musical and cultural history that reads like an inventory of all that is exciting and innovative about the 60s and 70s: The Doors, Love’s Forever Changes, Tim Buckley’s Goodbye & Hello, The Stooges, the MC5’s Kick Out The Jams, Queen and Queen II, The Incredible String Band, Carly Simon’s No Secrets, and many, many more.

This fully revised and expanded edition includes a brand new foreword by John Densmore of The Doors and draws on extensive new interviews with a wide range of Elektra alumni, including Lenny Kaye, Joe Boyd, Tom Paley, Johnny Echols, Jean Ritchie, and Bernie Krause, as well as further conversations with Holzman himself. It also adds two new chapters: a look at Elektra in Britain in the 60s and a reappraisal of the label’s 70s output.

MICK HOUGHTON is a music publicist and journalist who bought his first Elektra LP in 1966. Since 1978, he has looked after the Ramones, Talking Heads, Undertones, Echo & The Bunnymen, Julian Cope, Sonic Youth, The Jesus & Mary Chain, The KLF, Spiritualized, XTC, Bert Jansch, and Richard Thompson, among many others. He is the author of the acclaimed I’ve Always Kept A Unicorn: The Biography Of Sandy Denny (2015), and his writing has appeared in Let It Rock, Circus, ZigZag, Sounds, Time Out, Mojo, and Uncut. He was one of the compilers and producers of – as well as writing the accompanying book for – the Grammy-nominated Forever Changing: The Golden Age of Elektra 1963–1973 boxed set.

JOHN DENSMORE is a musician and songwriter best known as the drummer in The Doors. He is the author of the bestselling autobiography Riders On The Storm (1990) and The Doors: Unhinged (2013).

PRAISE FOR THE FIRST EDITION OF BECOMING ELEKTRA:
“The ideal guide to a catalogue brimming in madcap genius and the occasional well-adjusted success story.” Mojo

“This meticulously researched history taps into founder Jac Holzman’s folk roots to tell the stories from the bohemian spring that preceded the summer of love … an essential artefact.” Q

“That rare kind of book which succeeds on every front … perfectly encapsulates the enigmatic, unpredictable spirit of a label which has instigated musical sea-changes and tantalised collectors for decades.” Record Collector

“This memorably thorough account shows Holzman’s qualities in spades … passion with pragmatism and the courage to embrace new forms.” The Wire

“A cracking new biography of the pioneering Elektra label and its firestarter, Jac Holzman.” The Word

“A dazzling narrative that goes way beyond the realms of geeky musos.

352 pages, Kindle Edition

First published September 1, 2010

4 people are currently reading
79 people want to read

About the author

Mick Houghton

6 books3 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
14 (28%)
4 stars
23 (46%)
3 stars
11 (22%)
2 stars
1 (2%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Andy.
Author 18 books153 followers
September 2, 2019
This might be a better read for some than Jac Holzman's Follow The Music in that it's a coffee table book, so it's filled with great photographs of Elektra artists both famous and obscure. Houghton also follows the artists post-Elektra (ie. Phil Ochs' legendary A&M albums, etc.). Holzman's book, of course, does not. I like them both, but the gorgeous pics make the scales tip towards this tome.
Profile Image for Lindsay.
1,237 reviews
May 10, 2025
Nice overview of Jac Holzman and the first couple decades of Elektra. There was a lot to cover here, so the book was perfunctory more than a truly deep dive. Because of this, I didn't get as many fun anecdotes as I would have liked, but it did prompt me to listen to artists I'd never really given a shot and some I'd never heard of. I also got some new favorite albums out of it. And as always, it was great to read about faves like Tim Buckley and The Stooges.
Profile Image for Jim Cherry.
Author 12 books56 followers
September 1, 2010
Jac Holzman’s Adventures in Recordland

“Becoming Elektra” covers the years from when Elektra records was founded by Jac Holzman in his college dorm room to when he sold Elektra to Warner Communications. In between there was a lot of music, a lot of taking chances, a folk music scene that exploded, a rock music scene that exploded, iconic personalities and albums, iconic producers, and at the center of it, some times barely hanging on, was Jac Holzman and Elektra.

The late 40’s and early 50’s were a comparable time to our’s for the recording industry as today technology is available to those who want to make a CD. The early 50’s was on the cutting edge of a technology change. The young and ambitious were there to take advantage of it. Many record companies started up at this time. Some didn’t survive, but some did and we know them today; Atlantic Records, Chess Records and Elektra. The first technology to make this possible was the ability to create thinner and smaller records that were more easily usable than the thick 78’s. The mechanical technology to record, portable and widely available to everyone was left over equipment from World War II.

This technological vantage point is where Holzman found himself when he started Elektra. Another was New York as the opening of coffee shops put the city at the forefront of folk music as a scene. Holzman was able to record the folk denizens of Greenwich Village. Later, when the music scene in Los Angeles was about to burst Holzman had the insight to see the Sunset Strip as the same kind of focal point for music that Greenwich Village was in the 50‘s.

Since Elektra was a small company that didn’t have a lot to lose but a lot to prove. Holzman was willing to experiment and let his artists experiment, from recording in a church or the artist’s apartment to a club the artist was familiar with and comfortable in, to the experiments of Paul Rothchild and The Doors in the studio. His only credo was “just do what’s right for the music.”

Perhaps the easiest and best review I could write would be a review just listing all the names of Elektra’s artists over the years. Theodore Bikel, Josh White, Judy Henske, Tom Paxton, Jean Ritchie, Judy Collins, Cynthia Gooding, Susan Reed, Sabicas, The Paul Butterfield Blues Band, Tim Buckley, Phil Ochs, Tom Rush, Jean Redpath, The Dillards, John Sebastian, The Doors, Love, Clearlight, Bread, David Ackles, The Stooges, MC5, Queen, Jackson Browne amongst others. Or I could write of all the different styles of music Elektra recorded: world music, theme albums, military genre albums, ethnic music, the blues, folk, and flamenco. You would think that a compelling enough reasons to buy the book.

Elektra’s reputation has preceded it and earlier generations of Elektra artists have influenced later generations. Doors guitarist Robby Krieger had quite a few of Elektra’s flamenco albums in his teenage record collection.

Don’t let the thumbnail graphic of the book fool you into thinking it‘s an ordinary book. The book you’ll receive is absolutely beautiful, filled with page after page of high gloss pictures, album covers, people, places, catalogs, records, letters, memos, performers. Anything and everything from Elektra’s history.

An oral history of Elektra “Follow The Music” was published in the 90’s and it gives you the Elektra story from the point of the participants. If you already have “Follow The Music” (as I have) it‘s a great companion book. If you don‘t have “Follow The Music,” “Becoming Elektra” is a great stand alone volume that gives you the wider perspective of the history and events. I was surprised at the new information I discovered, stories were filled out, and broader knowledge of the artists and music I now have.

I’m not one to recommend a publisher or their whole catalog, but Jawbone Press is an exception. They’re publishing high quality books in both content and the actual physical book. If you’re a rock fan I would highly recommend other Jawbone Press books such as “Forever Changes: Arthur Lee and the Book of Love” and “Return of the King.”
Profile Image for Blog on Books.
268 reviews103 followers
November 22, 2010
Unlike most volumes on a single company – in this case, a record label – “Becoming Elektra” is not about Elektra Records as a whole, but is rather an illustrated history of the label during the reign of its legendary founder, Jac Holtzman.

What began largely as a folk-based label started back in 1951, while Holtzman was still at St. John’s College, became a powerhouse of rock by the end of Holtzman’s tenure with such chart-topping acts as the Doors and Queen. Along the way, Holtzman’s taste allowed for a panoply of folk singers to reach public audiences, many for the first time. Phil Ochs, Judy Collins, Tim Buckley and the Incredible String Band were some of the labels early successes. Even in its nascent days, the label went beyond the limits of pop music by releasing records titled Zodiac Cosmic Sounds, Sing Along in Hebrew and later a Child’s Garden of Grass. Elektra was the first mainstream label to issue an extensive series of sound effects records as well.

Through it all, the label was known for its organic sensibilities. Despite the breakthroughs of the Doors and L.A.’s Love, it wasn’t until the sale to Warner Communications and the eventual handing over the reigns to David Geffen, Joe Smith, Bob Krasnow and Sylvia Rhone that Elektra became a full fledged, mainstream label. In Houghton’s book, Elektra is Holtzman’s label, and while the founder returned in recent years to both technical and advisory roles within the Warner Music Group, the book begins and ends with the Holtzman musical era.
Profile Image for Dan Pasquini.
41 reviews
November 21, 2013
It's a long slog through the early folk years -- you want to just skip ahead to the Doors and Love -- but a rewarding one, and necessary to understand how the label was able to break the acts that it did. Also turned me on to some great, essential stuff (eg Judy Henske and, via a Judy Collins cover, Richard & Mimi Farina). Great color illustrations of every album cover.
Profile Image for Tim Lockwood.
5 reviews
February 1, 2017
Well researched history of the years that Jac Holzmnan ran the legendary label, finishing when David Geffen took over in 1973. In effect this makes it as much about Holzman than a full history of the label but this is a minor caveat for such an excellent, superbly illustrated book.
54 reviews2 followers
March 21, 2017
Great! And I almost immediately, synchronicitly, then found a bunch of free and/or cheap copies of several Elektra albums on vinyl.
319 reviews16 followers
Read
November 13, 2019
Good book I enjoy reading about musical performers , labels etc. Since many of my favorite performers recorded for electra I really enjoined this book
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.