Information About - Cylinders
Information About - Cylinders
1881 - Charles Tainter at the Volta Lab made the first lateral-cut records,
but without any practical machine to play them back.
1902 - Edison introduced "Gold Molded" cylinders for $.50 each with an
improved hard wax surface and able to be mass-produced by a molding
process; in Europe "Red Seal" 10-inch discs with 4-minute capacity were
sold for $1.00, each featuring famous European artists, such as tenor
Enrico Caruso and baritone Mattia Battistini. The first Red label records
were made in Russia by Fedor Chaliapan, singer for the Imperial Opera,
who recorded 10 records for Fred Gaisberg and the Gramophone Co. April
11 in Milan; Victor began to import these celebrity labels in 1903 and
became the leading seller of classical music records. The 10-inch disc
would quickly become more popular that the previous 7-inch standard disc
that could only play for 2-3 minutes.
1903 - Eldridge Johnson began to sell the Victor IV phonograph, the first
model equipped with his tapered tone arm, patent 814,786 filed Feb. 12.
1908 - John Lomax, on his first trip west, recorded a black saloon keeper in
San Antonio singing "Home on the Range" on an Edison cylinder and the
lyrics were written down and published in the book "Cowboy Songs and
Frontier Ballads" by Lomax in 1910 and the song became a national
favorite; Lomax and his son Alan would record 10,000 songs for the Library
of Congress Archive of the American Folk Song.
1910 - John McCormack signed his recording contract with the Victor Co.
that would result in hundreds of recordings made over the next 20 years.
1912 - Edison introduced celluloid blue Amberol cylinders that played for 4
minutes. When played with a diamond stylus, the new cylinder had low
surface noise that resulted in higher acoustic quality than flat discs.
1913 - Edison finally conceded victory to the flat disc when he began to sell
the Diamond-Disc players and recordings. The Diamond discs had a
surface of Condensite plastic laminated to a solid core and a thickness of
1/4 inch. Condensite was a resin plastic like Bakelite, the first artificial
plastic patented in 1909 by Leo Baekeland. The players used the same
Diamond Point Reproducer used in the Blue Amberols but tracked at
heavier force; see pictures of the Diamond Disc phonographs.
1915 - U.S. Navy seized Telefunken radio station at Sayville, Long Island,
that was using Telegraphone wire recorders to send high speed
transmissions to Germany.
1915 - Edison suggested in 1915 that the U.S. create a Naval Research
Laboratory - picture of Edison sculpted from life.
1923 - New York's WHN broadcast of the influential big band led by
Fletcher Henderson.
1923 - Fiddlin' John Carson's "Little Old Log Cabin in the Lane" became the
first hit country record.
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. As documents of American cultural history
and musical style, cylinders serve as an audible witness to the sounds and
songs through which typical audiences first encountered the recorded
human voice. And for those living at the turn of the 20th century, the most
likely source of recorded sound on cylinders would have been Thomas Alva
Edison's crowning achievement, the phonograph. Edison wasn't the only
one in the sound recording business in the first decades of the 20th
century; several companies with a great number of recording artists, in
addition to the purveyors of the burgeoning disc format, all competed in the
musical marketplace. Still, more than any other figure of his time, Edison
and the phonograph became synonymous with the cylinder medium.
Edison cylinder players could also record and worn-out wax cylinders could
be resurfaced and re-recorded. Microphones came into use about 1924
and the acoustics era ended. Singers with weaker voices (crooners) could
record and radio began. Early voices in this new era were Whispering Jack
Smith and Gene Austin. The microphone was further improved in 1927.