Description
GRAMOPHONE RECORD / vintage analog storage medium 6 collections. More vintage items here.
Disc size: 250mm
Weight: 1.4 kg / 3 lb
After packing: 2 kg / 4.4 lb
I will ship via Courier Service(5-7 working days) worldwide, insured.
We also sell a list of other gramophone disc(subject to availability, hurry up!):
1.) The Master’s Voice: Main Stem(Ebington) and After All(strayhorn)
2.) Philips: Comedian’s Galop and Decoration
3.) Philips: Ain’t She Sweet(Milton Ager / Yallen) and Why Do I Love You (Hammerstein ll / Kern)
4.) Mercury: The Flirt and No Time(Wayne-Lavello)
5.) Philips: I Never Saw The Show (T.Connor and his Orchestra) and How Did He Look(G.Shelly / A.Silver)
6.) Elite-Serie Austroton: Terrasse am Meer(Ernst Fischer) and Alt Wien(Carl Michael Ziehrer)
7.) Nixa: The Singing Dogs(directed by Carl Weismann)
8.) Mercury: I Spoke Too Soon(Smis-Kosloff) and Sh-Boom(Keyes Feaster-McRae-Edwards)
9.) The Master’sVoice: Intermezzo(Cavalleria Rusticana)(mascagni) and Serenade
10.) Mercury: Almost Always(Lichty-Douglas-Lavere) and Am I Losing You(G.R Rolfson-E. Howard) EDDY HOWARD And His Orchestra
11.) Columbia: I Wish I Wuz(“Slaughter Trail”) and Sweetheart Of Yesterday(Sigman-Faith) THE BEVERLEY SISTERS
12.) Decca: If I Give My Heart To You and A Sky Blue Shirt And A Rainbow Tie
13.) Capitol: The Kids Who Pay(The Child’s Side Of Life) and Tennessee Tango(Pee Wee King – Redd Stewart)
14.) Capitol: When Did We Leave Heaven?(Bullock: Whitting) and Mississippi Mambo
15.) Columbia: Serenata(Enrico Toselli) and La Fontaine Fantastique(B.Lensky)
16.) Decca: On The Quarterdeck-March(K.J.Alford) and Manoeuvre March(Manoeuvre Mars)(P.A.Stenz)
Wikipedia: A gramophone record is a flat disk that is usually made of plastic. The sound is recorded on a very fine line or groove which goes around and around in a spiral from the outside edge of the disk to the center. The phonograph plays the sound with a needle that touches the groove. A record usually has different music on each side. When made of vinyl they were also known as vinyl records. Most music made in the 20th century used this format.
Thomas Edison made early phonographs in the 1870s. He originally used tin foil to record the sound. Soon wax cylinders were used in place of the tin foil. The cylinders could be taken off the machine and put back on without destroying the recording. Although discs were made as early as 1888, it was not until 1902 that discs became more popular than cylinder records. Discs were first made of a shellac mixture, and later of polyvinyl chloride, often abbreviated as “vinyl”. Singles usually carried only one or two songs or recordings. EPs (extended play records) carried from three to five songs. Albums carried many more recordings; a dozen was normal, or from 30 to 45 minutes of playing time. These formats are still used today, with digital recordings, and playing time for singles and albums has grown considerably.
Vinyl records lost popularity but never went out of production. Now, in recent years vinyl is gaining popularity, while CD record shops have gone out of business, more and more vinyl only record shops are opening. Many argue the higher sound quality of vinyl compared to newer formats.
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