
George
I have a single-sided Edison record also. The blank side is truly blank, no grooves, nothing. The recorded side has a blank Edison paper label with a handwritten description; it is a landline Morse Code practice record. Ham radio operators cannot "copy" it because landline code is different from International Morse Code.OrthoSean wrote:Weird...2571 doesn't show up in my list of matrix #s either, but 2564 and 2573 were both issued matrices recorded in November 1913. Does it have any kind of paper label (like the buff label you see when the white label is gone or just nothing? I have lots of test pressing DDs, all of which have unfinished edges at about 10.5 or so inches in diameter like yours. Sounds to me like you have an unissued test. Stuff like that is always neat to discover. While emptying my C-200 for moving the other day, I came across an odd Edison test of some sort with two tunes that were never coupled on the same disc, this one has a blank Edison label on each side with the information neatly penned in with fountain pen ink. I had forgotten all about it.
Sean
WDC wrote:George, You really have found an interesting record. It is indeed a November 1913 recording of a small series made in London.
This is German selection by Fritz Feinhals, Lied an den Abendstern from Tannhäuser (Wagner).
Did you only tap the piano intro, or is it really a baritone solo as Norman wrote?!penman wrote:The recording is a solo classical piano piece that I don't recognize.
George