Nassau records
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- Victor I
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Nassau records
In the same batch of 78's (see my post about 9-inch Zonophone records: viewtopic.php?f=3&t=47329) I found more than a dozen (so far) of a label I had never come across before: Nassau. I've read the entry on them in Sutton & Nauck, but it leaves me wanting more: manufactured for an unknown retailer or distributor, unlisted place of manufacture, etc. All but one that I have found so far have the "scroll" type label pictured on the left. Can anyone tell me any more about these? Any idea where -- in terms of both stores and geography -- they were sold, and where they are most likely to be found? How uncommon are they?
- epigramophone
- Victor Monarch Special
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- phonosandradios
- Victor II
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- Personal Text: So many audio formats, so little listening time!
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Re: Nassau records
Thanks for posting that link - what a fantastic resource that web site is!
I am interested in all forms of audio media including: gramophones, phonographs, wire recorders, the tefifon, reel to reel tapes, radiograms and radios.
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- Victor II
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Re: Nassau records
Apart from anything else, Nassau labels must be the most uninformative ever printed. I have a ten-inch disc or the 'scroll' type whose entire wording is THE TOURIST / Band / C 48. The piece sounds like one of Sousa's, and the nameless band is one of the best I have ever heard.
The 'Imperial' label, destined (as the name implies) for the British market, is closely related to these; my example (Frank C. Stanley singing Elgar's 'Land of Hope and Glory') has a label on the back with similar wording to that of the Nassaus and printed in the same typeface.
Oliver Mundy.
The 'Imperial' label, destined (as the name implies) for the British market, is closely related to these; my example (Frank C. Stanley singing Elgar's 'Land of Hope and Glory') has a label on the back with similar wording to that of the Nassaus and printed in the same typeface.
Oliver Mundy.