Re: Where My Money Went This Week
Posted: Thu Nov 19, 2015 1:31 pm
What, no Hawaiian music?!
https://forum.talkingmachine.info/
Lucius1958 wrote:There certainly are!rgordon939 wrote:These are the titles of the 36 I bought. There are some really good ones.
762 DEAR HEART, SONG
569 BATTLE OF SAORIAGO
759 COTTON BLOSSOMS, SONG
706 RUBIN & MAID, MANDOLIN
639 VESPER BELLS, SONG
727 CREOLE BELLS, SONG
730 HONKY DORY, BANJO
686 WINE, WOMEN & SONG, BANJO
909 I WANT TO BE AN ACTOR LADY
561 RUBIN & THE MAID
536 SUNDAY AFTERNOON, SONG
714 SPANISH WALTZ, MANDOLIN
501 LONGING IN MY HEART
627 ALMOST PURSWADED, QUARTET
533 WHISTLE BIRD IMITATIONS
540 STARS AND STRIPES, BAND
722 DOWN IN THE CORNFIELD, SONG
628 SCHUBERTS SERENADE, SONG
693 FLOWER SONG, SAPRANO
589 THE JOLLY COOPERSMITH, BAND
609 MOCKING BIRD, WHISTLE
707 MOTHER WAS A QUEEN, DUET
574 McMANUS & PARROT
535 MAN IN THE MINT, SONG
586 CASEY AT DENTIST, RECITATION
776 MARSELLAISE, SONG
736 MOLLY, SONG
531 CHIMES: OLD FOLKS AT HOME
622 LEAD KINDLY LIGHT, QUARTET
518 DUET: HELLO CENTRAL
615 LADY HOTTENTOT, SONG
567 COUNTRY FAIR
506 SWEET SIXTEEN, SONG
586 STEAMBOAT LEAGING
694 ROMEO & JULIET, SAPRANO
700 HAND & CRADLE, SONG
Rich Gordon![]()
Bill
If you play them with a modern set-up using a modern magnetic cartridge at very light tracking weight, there will be zero wear.rgordon939 wrote:Stars and Stripes by John Philip Sousa is also one of my favorites. I don't want to play them because they have never been played and I want to keep them in that condition.
Rich Gordon
There sure is! Play them on a Columbia BF or some other Columbia model that has a 6" mandrel.wtt11 wrote:Btw, is there any method to play them without reaming? Any machine with smaller mandrel? I'm lucky enough to have two but never have a chance to listen as I don't want to do any damage on them...
While I can somewhat understand your desire, for me, the whole purpose of owning vintage cylinders and discs is for the music and performance contained on them. Buying a few dozen cylinders just to keep and look at would not be an option for me. Your house could burn down tomorrow, or you could be the victim of a robbery or any other type of catastrophic event which would cause these cylinders to be gone forever, and you may have the only extant copy of them, so the music, song or contents would be lost forever, unless you make copy recordings of them.rgordon939 wrote:I don't think that at any time it was said that playing the Pink Lamberts would HURT them. What I did say was that I didn't want to play them because they have never been played and that I wanted to keep them in that condition.
Rich Gordon