Close Menu
Influential MagazineInfluential Magazine
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Entrepreneurs
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Leadership
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest business and finance news for entrepreneurs all around the world.

What's Hot
Musk Called Trump Privately Before Posting Message of ‘Regret’

Musk Called Trump Privately Before Posting Message of ‘Regret’

June 11, 2025
Washington Post Names Adam O’Neal as Opinion Editor

Washington Post Names Adam O’Neal as Opinion Editor

June 11, 2025
How Immigrants and Labor, Long Joined in L.A., Set the Stage for Protest

How Immigrants and Labor, Long Joined in L.A., Set the Stage for Protest

June 11, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Influential MagazineInfluential Magazine
SUBSCRIBE
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Entrepreneurs
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Leadership
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
Influential MagazineInfluential Magazine
Home » Barbara Holdridge, Whose Record Label Foretold Audiobooks, Dies at 95

Barbara Holdridge, Whose Record Label Foretold Audiobooks, Dies at 95

June 11, 20257 Mins Read Business
Barbara Holdridge, Whose Record Label Foretold Audiobooks, Dies at 95
Share
Facebook Twitter Reddit Telegram Pinterest Email

Barbara Holdridge, who co-founded the first commercially successful spoken-word record label, one that began with the poet Dylan Thomas reciting his story “A Child’s Christmas in Wales” and that led to today’s multibillion-dollar audiobook industry, died on Monday at home in Baltimore, Md. She was 95.

Her daughter, Eleanor Holdridge, confirmed the death.

Ms. Holdridge, along with her best friend, Marianne Mantell, built the label, Caedmon Records, into a recording industry dynamo by releasing LPs of such notable authors and poets as W.H. Auden, T.S. Eliot, Langston Hughes, Gertrude Stein, Robert Frost, Eudora Welty, William Faulkner and Ernest Hemingway reading their own words.

As the recordings’ popularity grew — sales reached $14 million by 1966 (about $141 million in today’s currency) — Caedmon began recording plays and other works of literature performed by famous actors, including Vanessa Redgrave, John Gielgud, Maggie Smith, Richard Burton and Basil Rathbone. The label also produced children’s stories like “Babar” and “Winnie the Pooh,” employing Boris Karloff, Carol Channing and other performers to read them.

But it was the Dylan Thomas album, featuring the poet’s resonant delivery, that put the infant company on the road to success. Thomas, an eccentric, hard-drinking Welsh poet, was at the height of his fame when the record was released in 1952, and it went on to sell more than 400,000 copies in the 1950s, an unheard amount for such literary fare. Just over a year later, he died of pneumonia at 39.

“If we had started with some of the wonderful poets we recorded later, such as Katherine Anne Porter, Archibald MacLeish, Ezra Pound and Faulkner, I don’t think anybody would have cared that much,” Ms. Holdridge said in 2014 in an interview with WNYC radio in New York. “Students would have. Literature professors would have. But the spark was the Dylan Thomas recordings, and with the money that came from the sales of those recordings, we were able to go forward and record the authors whom we admired.”

The label aimed to present literature as it originated — in the spoken word, Ms. Holdridge explained. She and Ms. Mantell named the company Caedmon in honor of the seventh-century cowherd considered the earliest known English poet.

Though there had been attempts at spoken-word recordings before Caedmon, the two women, who had scraped together $1,500 to start the venture, foresaw a broad audience for authors reading their own words.

“They were enormously prescient,” Matthew Barton, the recorded sound curator for the Library of Congress, said in an interview last year for this obituary. “If you walked into a record store in 1952 and heard Dylan Thomas reading ‘A Child’s Christmas in Wales,’ you would say, ‘I want that,’ and your wallet comes out. It showed how well they understood the potential of the medium in this way.”

The Library of Congress added the album to its National Recording Registry in 2008, noting that “it has been credited with launching the audiobook industry in the United States.” By 2023, the audiobook market had achieved almost $7 billion in global sales, reaching an estimated 140 million listeners.

Under Ms. Holdridge and Ms. Mantell, Caedmon earned dozens of Grammy nominations and became the gold standard for spoken-word recordings.

The Caedmon story is made more remarkable by the fact that Ms. Holdridge and Ms. Mantell — Barbara Cohen and Marianne Roney at the time — were 22-year-old recent graduates of Hunter College in Manhattan when they began their label. Both had degrees in the humanities, and neither had any business experience. In an era when women were expected to be housewives or schoolteachers, Ms. Holdridge, who worked as an assistant editor at a New York publisher, and Ms. Mantell, who wrote label copy for a record company, were ambitious, determined and bored.

Over lunch one day, they lamented that they were working for bosses “who were much more stupid than we,” Ms. Holdridge recalled in the WNYC interview. She suggested that they go to a reading that Thomas was giving that night at the 92nd Street Y. Ms. Mantell then made a further suggestion: “Let’s record him.” They had already been discussing the idea of recording authors reading their own works.

After the reading, they sent a note to Thomas asking if he would consider participating in a recording project with them. They signed the note “B. Cohen and M. Roney,” so that he wouldn’t know that they were women. His manager intercepted the note and sent them a reply, suggesting that they call Thomas at the Chelsea Hotel, where he was living at the time.

After several unsuccessful attempts to reach him, Ms. Holdridge tried calling at 5 o’clock one morning, on the chance that he might just be stumbling home after a night of hard drinking. He picked up the phone. Yes, he said, he would meet the women to discuss their idea.

To their surprise, he actually showed up at the appointed hour, bringing along his wife, the writer Caitlin Thomas. Over a boisterous lunch, he agreed to do the recording for a $500 advance, plus royalties.

“He even wrote down a number of poems he wanted to record,” Ms. Holdridge recalled. “Getting him to the recording studio, though, was something else.”

After one no-show, Thomas eventually arrived at Steinway Hall, a studio on West 57th Street, and recorded a series of poems, including his masterpiece “Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night.” When they still didn’t have enough material to fill both sides of a 33⅓ LP, the women asked if he had anything else to record, and he remembered a story he had published in Harper’s Bazaar called “A Child’s Christmas in Wales,” a nostalgic reminiscence from a young boy’s viewpoint. He recorded it as the B-side of the album, and it was that tale that catapulted the record to best-sellerdom.

The women began contacting other famous writers, both male and female, asking them to come to the studio to record their words. And many did.

Barbara Ann Cohen was born in New York City on July 26, 1929, to Herbert Lawrence Cohen, a textile sales representative, and Bertha (Gold) Cohen, who oversaw the household.

Barbara was an avid reader as a child and studied Greek. She also developed a lifelong love of gardening, starting out by making little gardens of twigs and acorns on her apartment windowsill.

She married Lawrence Holdridge, a hydraulic engineer, in 1959. He died in 1998. In addition to her daughter Eleanor, she is survived by another daughter, Diana Holdridge, and two grandchildren. Ms. Mantell died in 2023 at 93.

Ms. Holdridge and Ms. Mantell sold Caedmon to Raytheon in 1970, and it was later acquired by Harper Collins, where the Caedmon imprint of HarperAudio still exists.

In 2001, Ms. Holdridge was inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame, which lauded her for creating a broad audience for “diverse, high-quality literature” and demonstrating the significance of spoken-word recordings. “The Caedmon catalog is extraordinary for the dramatic gender equality and cultural inclusiveness it achieved,” the Hall of Fame website states. “It expanded the audience for American women’s writing, and women’s writing in general.”

After selling Caedmon, Ms. Holdridge and her husband bought the 18th-century Stemmer House in Owings Mills, Md., and she created Stemmer House Publishers, which put out children’s books and sourcebooks for designers and artists. There, she leaned into another of her passions, developing a 40-acre garden on the property. She also taught book publishing and writing at Loyola University Maryland.

Explaining her aspirations for Caedmon, Ms. Holdridge told NPR in 2002: “We did not want to do a collection of great voices or important literary voices. We wanted them to read as though they were recreating the moment of inspiration. They did exactly that. They read with a feeling, an inspiration that came through.”

Ash Wu contributed reporting.

Audio Recordings Audiobooks Barbara Book Trade and Publishing Books and Literature Caedmon Records Deaths (Obituaries) Downloads and Streaming Dylan Holdridge Mantell Marianne (1929-2023) Poetry and Poets Thomas Writing and Writers
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Reddit Email
Previous ArticleABC Says Terry Moran, Suspended for Social Media Posts, Will Not Return
Next Article U.S. and China Agree to Walk Back Trade Tensions

Related Posts

Musk Called Trump Privately Before Posting Message of ‘Regret’

Musk Called Trump Privately Before Posting Message of ‘Regret’

June 11, 2025
Washington Post Names Adam O’Neal as Opinion Editor

Washington Post Names Adam O’Neal as Opinion Editor

June 11, 2025
How Immigrants and Labor, Long Joined in L.A., Set the Stage for Protest

How Immigrants and Labor, Long Joined in L.A., Set the Stage for Protest

June 11, 2025
The House’s Policy Bill Would Lose Money. Could Trump’s Tariffs Replace It?

The House’s Policy Bill Would Lose Money. Could Trump’s Tariffs Replace It?

June 11, 2025
Richard Beattie, Who Helped Pioneer Private Equity Takeovers, Dies at 86

Richard Beattie, Who Helped Pioneer Private Equity Takeovers, Dies at 86

June 11, 2025
Midea Recalls AC Units Over Mold Risk, Leaving Customers Frustrated

Midea Recalls AC Units Over Mold Risk, Leaving Customers Frustrated

June 11, 2025
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Don't Miss
Musk Called Trump Privately Before Posting Message of ‘Regret’

Musk Called Trump Privately Before Posting Message of ‘Regret’

By News RoomJune 11, 2025

President Trump received a phone call from Elon Musk late on Monday night, outreach that…

Washington Post Names Adam O’Neal as Opinion Editor

Washington Post Names Adam O’Neal as Opinion Editor

June 11, 2025
How Immigrants and Labor, Long Joined in L.A., Set the Stage for Protest

How Immigrants and Labor, Long Joined in L.A., Set the Stage for Protest

June 11, 2025
The House’s Policy Bill Would Lose Money. Could Trump’s Tariffs Replace It?

The House’s Policy Bill Would Lose Money. Could Trump’s Tariffs Replace It?

June 11, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest business and finance news for entrepreneurs all around the world.

About Us
About Us

Influential Magazine is one of the top news portals about Business and Finance news for Entrepreneurs and leaders all around the world, follow us for more intersting articles and news.

Our Picks
The House’s Policy Bill Would Lose Money. Could Trump’s Tariffs Replace It?

The House’s Policy Bill Would Lose Money. Could Trump’s Tariffs Replace It?

June 11, 2025
Richard Beattie, Who Helped Pioneer Private Equity Takeovers, Dies at 86

Richard Beattie, Who Helped Pioneer Private Equity Takeovers, Dies at 86

June 11, 2025
Midea Recalls AC Units Over Mold Risk, Leaving Customers Frustrated

Midea Recalls AC Units Over Mold Risk, Leaving Customers Frustrated

June 11, 2025
Trending Now
CPI Inflation Data is Muted as Tariff Impact is Limited

CPI Inflation Data is Muted as Tariff Impact is Limited

June 11, 2025
China Walks a Line in U.S. Trade Talks, Trying Not to Overplay Its Hand

China Walks a Line in U.S. Trade Talks, Trying Not to Overplay Its Hand

June 11, 2025
Rubio Is Pressing to Open Sanctions Investigation Into Harvard

Rubio Is Pressing to Open Sanctions Investigation Into Harvard

June 11, 2025
Influential Magazine
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conditions
© 2025 Influential Mag. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.