Table of Contents
- 1 What came after the turntable?
- 2 Do they still make wax cylinders?
- 3 Is the graphophone still used today?
- 4 What did Emile Berliner invent?
- 5 Why did Emile Berliner’s flat disk replace Thomas Edison’s wax cylinder and why did this technical reconfiguration matter in the history of mass media?
- 6 What is another name for record player?
- 7 What was the price of a cylinder phonograph?
- 8 Who was the first person to invent the phonograph?
What came after the turntable?
Ten years later, 1887, came the next peg along the turntable line: the gramophone. The patent of Emile Berliner, it used a needle to laterally trace spiral grooves onto a cylinder. Soon, cylinders were replaced by flat discs, initially made of rubber and, later, shellac.
Do they still make wax cylinders?
Meanwhile, wax cylinders are still used to record today with songs such as They Might Be Giants’ “I can hear you” and (possibly) Titus Andronicus’ “A more perfect union,” though these aren’t part of the collection.
Is the graphophone still used today?
A company that is still known today–Columbia Records, originally used the graphophone. They used it to record music and sell it. This technology is no longer just for corporations.
When was the last wax cylinder made?
1929
From the first recordings made on tinfoil in 1877 to the last produced on celluloid in 1929, cylinders spanned a half-century of technological development in sound recording.
What did Edison before wax?
He experimented with a diaphragm which had an embossing point and was held against rapidly-moving paraffin paper. The speaking vibrations made indentations in the paper. Edison later changed the paper to a metal cylinder with tin foil wrapped around it.
What did Emile Berliner invent?
Phonograph
Berliner microphoneDisc Record Gramaphone
Emile Berliner/Inventions
Emil Berliner, Emil also spelled Emile, (born May 20, 1851, Hannover, Hanover [Germany]—died Aug. 3, 1929, Washington, D.C., U.S.), German-born American inventor who made important contributions to telephone technology and developed the phonograph record disc.
Why did Emile Berliner’s flat disk replace Thomas Edison’s wax cylinder and why did this technical reconfiguration matter in the history of mass media?
Why did Emile Berliner’s flat disk replace Thomas Edison’s wax cylinder, and why did this technical reconfiguration matter in the history of mass media? the gramophone was a better machine and this brought sound recording into is mass medium stage. How did sound recording survive the coming of radio?
What is another name for record player?
phonograph
In this page you can discover 14 synonyms, antonyms, idiomatic expressions, and related words for record player, like: hi-fi, victrola, phonograph, compact disk player, cd player, stereo, music-box, juke box, gramophone, tape-recorder and audio sound system.
How did the phonograph change over the years?
After the initial development of the phonograph, changes and improvements began developing at a rapid pace. By 1901, mass produced wax cylinders allowed artists to record a song or other sounds in larger quantities rather than recording each cylinder one at a time.
When did the Edison Disc Phonograph become popular?
Photograph of Thomas A. Edison listening to the New Edison Diamond Disc Phonograph. Advertisement in The Gramophone, December 1923. Cylinders peaked in popularity around 1905. After this, discs and disc players, most notably the Victrolas, began to dominate the market.
What was the price of a cylinder phonograph?
Prices for the phonographs had significantly diminished from its early days of $150 (in 1891) down to $20 for the Standard model and $7.50 for a model known as the Gem, introduced in 1899. Standard-sized cylinders, which tended to be 4.25″ long and 2.1875″ in diameter, were 50 cents each and typically played at 120 r.p.m.
Who was the first person to invent the phonograph?
While modern designs look vastly different from the original photograph, you can see a reflection of the initial invention when you evaluate the history and development of the phonograph. The original phonograph was invented and patented by Edouard-Leon Scott in 1857.