Never played??

Discussions on Records, Recording, & Artists
User avatar
Springmotor70
Victor I
Posts: 123
Joined: Mon Jan 20, 2014 9:31 pm
Personal Text: Everybody Panatrope!
Location: St. Charles, Missouri

Re: Never played??

Post by Springmotor70 »

Winsleydale,

Thanks for the photos! The copyright is indeed 1947 on that album but the pressing is a bit later. That label dates from after 1954. RCA dropped new pressings in 78 rpm in 1958 but continued Educational pressings until 1960. Even if that master was cut in 1947 it was really intended to be played on a light weight pickup - ceramic or crystal on more modern equipment. You probably wont see material on a steel needle from playing - it will just wear out the groove faster.

Many collectors prefer not to play anything roughly after 1937-38 with a steel needle.

Nice user name btw - "Crackin' toast Grommit!"

Darren
"I think he was vaccinated with a phonograph needle"
My Old Boss 1923 - 2010

User avatar
winsleydale
Victor III
Posts: 709
Joined: Wed Dec 17, 2014 1:30 am
Personal Text: To be free is to be wealthy beyond measure
Location: Metro Detroit

Re: Never played??

Post by winsleydale »

Interesting. I didn't think that they kept stuff in production for that long. Also good to know not to keep playing them! It's actually kind of a shame, though, because my crank phonographs are the only music players I have, other than crappy mp3 files... Now I don't know what to do with them.
Resist the forces of evil in all their varied forms.

User avatar
FloridaClay
Victor VI
Posts: 3708
Joined: Wed Jan 26, 2011 7:14 pm
Location: Merritt Island, FL

Re: Never played??

Post by FloridaClay »

winsleydale wrote:Interesting. I didn't think that they kept stuff in production for that long. Also good to know not to keep playing them! It's actually kind of a shame, though, because my crank phonographs are the only music players I have, other than crappy mp3 files... Now I don't know what to do with them.
What I did was acquire an old, but recent enough to be solid state, Califone table-top phonograph. They are ruggedly built, being designed for use in schools, and show up frequently on eBay for not much money. And new cartridge reproducers (which include the stylus) are readily available, also for not much money. I use it to play things like Vogue picture discs and vinyl 78s, that would soon be toast with an old acoustic machine. It also gets a workout when I am cleaning and testing a batch of newly acquired 78s so I don't spend half my time winding springs.

Yesterday I got a call from a friend who noticed a couple of albums of 78s at a local thrift shop. I went to look at them and bought both, as the records are in great condition. The best of the 2 was a 4-record Commodore set; 1946 recordings by the "Original Dixieland Jazz Band." Some of the players had been members of the band since 1918! They sound great and they fill a hole in my collection as I had very little authentic Dixieland. Another record in the bunch is a shiny copy of Louis Jordan's fun "Saturday Night Fish Fry."

Clay
Arthur W. J. G. Ord-Hume's Laws of Collecting
1. Space will expand to accommodate an infinite number of possessions, regardless of their size.
2. Shortage of finance, however dire, will never prevent the acquisition of a desired object, however improbable its cost.

Post Reply