Has there ever been a book on the Orthophonic Victrolas?
- marcapra
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Has there ever been a book on the Orthophonic Victrolas?
I'm wondering if there has ever been a book published on the Orthophonic era from 1925 to 1929. I know there are books that include the Orthophonic era such as Baumbach's books, which are great, but I'm talking a book that would go into the details of just the Orthophonic era. It would include more than just specifications and data, but go into the restoration techniques, the era, the sales promotions, the dealer showrooms, and comparisons with the products that competed with Victrola like Brunswick, Columbia, and Edison. It seems if they could do a book dedicated to RCA's Radiolas, they could do a book on the Orthophonic machines and the Roaring Twenties era in which they flourished. I think I already know there is no such book or I would already own it.
- Retrograde
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Re: Has there ever been a book on the Orthophonic Victrolas?
sounds like a good project... you could retire in total financial bliss. Those Victroler book authors are always so rich you know
Seriously, it would be a great addition.
Seriously, it would be a great addition.
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- Victor V
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Re: Has there ever been a book on the Orthophonic Victrolas?
I think it's a great idea, but I'd be more interested in seeing a comprehensive book covering "Orthophonic Era" phonographs. In addition to providing "all in one place" information about the Victor models, it could include what is known about Columbia (Viva-Tonal models), Brunswick (Exponential Panatropes), Edison, Sonora ("Tonalic"?), Sears (Tru-phonic models), Wards (Mellophonic models), etc.
OrthoFan
OrthoFan
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Re: Has there ever been a book on the Orthophonic Victrolas?
Retrograde wrote:sounds like a good project... you could retire in total financial bliss. Those Victroler book authors are always so rich you know
George P.
- marcapra
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Re: Has there ever been a book on the Orthophonic Victrolas?
Yes, I think that's an even better idea! Even Pathé had a Credenza competitor called the Pathephonic. The book would be called In The Orthophonic Era with Donald Trump. I've been thinking about retiring to a beach front house in La Jolla and the money from the book would let me do that. I put the "Donald Trump" in the title just to get it on the Times Best Seller List. I'm going to let the book publishers court me and let them bid against each other until I get a great offer. I'm thinking it would be about 350 to 500 pages long with lots of full color plates and coffee table size.I think it's a great idea, but I'd be more interested in seeing a comprehensive book covering "Orthophonic Era" phonographs. In addition to providing "all in one place" information about the Victor models, it could include what is known about Columbia (Viva-Tonal models), Brunswick (Exponential Panatropes), Edison, Sonora ("Tonalic"?), Sears (Tru-phonic models), Wards (Mellophonic models), etc.
- gramophone-georg
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Re: Has there ever been a book on the Orthophonic Victrolas?
Marc, I'd title it "In The Orthophonic Era Without Donald Trump" to avoid the lawsuit... Bigly. Maybe even "Before Donald Trump". This way you can use the Trump name, yet with the title being 100% demonstrably true.
Sincerely, Mr. Lou Pohl, Esq.
Sincerely, Mr. Lou Pohl, Esq.
"He who dies with the most shellac wins"- some nutty record geek
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I got PTSD from Peter F's avatar
- fran604g
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Re: Has there ever been a book on the Orthophonic Victrolas?
Well, there goes this worthy post.
-Fran
-Fran
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- Victor V
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Re: Has there ever been a book on the Orthophonic Victrolas?
Not necessarily, since the idea has merit...fran604g wrote:Well, there goes this worthy post.
-Fran
Over the years, I've culled through the references on this site --
http://history.sandiego.edu/gen/recording/notes.html
http://history.sandiego.edu/GEN/recording/ortho.html
In terms of putting all of the available knowledge together, I think a good starting place would be an online guide--perhaps a new Wikipedia page--"Phonographs and Gramophones during the Era of Early Electrical Recording" with photos, text descriptions, jumps to related topics from websites, online books, etc. It could include input from members of this forum, and those interested. It could link to this page, in fact -- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victor_Or ... c_Victrola (Or, perhaps the page could be expanded?)
Wish I were more web savvy. I tried setting up a Wikipedia page about another topic once, and it turned out an absolute disaster. I had to have a friend of mine help me get it deleted.
OrthoFan
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- Victor II
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Re: Has there ever been a book on the Orthophonic Victrolas?
you could get it ediited by Linda McMahon since she is in charge of the SBA !! the companion video could have wreslers jump off the top turnbuckle onto crapophones !! I want a percentage since i thought of it though
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- Victor V
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Re: Has there ever been a book on the Orthophonic Victrolas?
Sounds like a good idea. The Orthos are a league of their own, would it cover the Victrola VV 1-70 as a Orthophonic like Look for the Dog?