The History of Vinyl.

1806: English physician and naturalist, Thomas Young, records the vibrations of a tuning fork on a rotating drum cover with wax. He is unfortunately unable to listen to what he’s recorded, because there is no way at that time to have played back the recording.

1857: Frenchman Leon Scott de Martinville develops the phonoautograph, with which he is able to record sound. The air pressure fluctuations caused by sound are translated into a wavy line on a soot-covered surface using a large horn, a diaphragm and a pig’s hair. Once again, though, similar to Thomas Young’s invention, there is no way to play back the sounds that are recorded.

1877: Another Frenchman, Charles Cros, actually comes up with an idea for a machine that can record sound and play it black. Unfortunately he was unable to find anyone to finance him so he is unable to try out his plans.

1877: Thomas Edison develops the first working phonograph able to record and play back sound after, earlier in the year, accidentally running tin foil under a stylus while experimenting with a new telegraph device, which enabled him to record his voice.

1881: Charles Tainter makes the first lateral-cut records, produced by a special lathe that cuts a wax master. He electroplates the discs with copper, but has no way to play them back to hear how they sounde.

1885: Chichester Bell and Charles Tainter together develop the “Graphophone” “and utilize a wax-coated cylinder cut with vertical grooves.”

1887: Edison updates his phonograph. He uses a solid wax cylinder and a battery-driven motor instead of a hand crank, which he originally used. This improves the sound, ensuring that there is a constant pitch instead of a wavering one.

phonograph

1888: Emile Berliner, a German Jewish immigrant to the United States, invents a gramophone that plays a 7-inch disc, which one manually turns at 30 RPM. From these discs, unlike with the cylinders, hard rubber copies are able to be mass produced.

1889: The Columbia Phonograph Co. is set up by Edward D. Easton and leases graphophones to businesses. They have more success, though, recording music and leasing the recordings out to be used in nickel “juke boxes.”

1890s: Nickel juke boxes become widely popular during the Depression years. These juke boxes utilize the cylinder technology, and many would allow multiple listeners by having more than one listening tube coming out of them.

1894: Emile Berliner’s US Gramophone Company makes and sells 1,000 gramophone machines, some electric-powered, most hand-powered. They also sell 25,000 hard rubber 7-inch records.

1895: Edison, in competition with the US Gramophone company, mass produces his phonograph and its cylinders. He updates the original design of his phonograph by adding a horn to it, which increases the volume of the sound output.

1896: Fred Gaisberg discovers that shellac works better than hard rubber for records. 1897: Shellac discs become the standard playback medium.

1900: Similar to records vs. CDs during the 1980s or beta video tapes vs. VHS, competition between disc and cylinder machines occurs as makers of both increase their mass production.

1901: Eldridge Johnson’s Consolidated Talking Machine Company merges with Emile Berliner’s company to create the Victor Talking Machine Company, which uses the “little nipper” dog as its trademark. 1904: Double-sided discs become available.

1906: The Victor Talking Machine Company introduces its “Victrola” upright enclosed playing machine, which becomes the best selling and most influential record player of its time.

1909: The term album is first used to reference a record because the release of the “Nutcracker Suite” on four double-sided discs reminds people of a photo album.

1913: Flat discs beat out cylinders in the battle of playback media as Edison finally concedes and begins selling his Diamond-Disc players and recordings.

1916: Theodore Case starts to develop a sound-on-film recording system for motion pictures.

1917: The record with the songs “Livery Stable Blues” and “Dixie Jass Band One Step” becomes the first Jazz record ever released on February 26, 1917, for the Victor Talking Machine Company. Controversy over this first Jazz record still continues today since the Original Dixieland Jass Band’s members were all white and many think they stole their sound from black musicians in New Orleans.

1921: The popularity of radio causes the first ever dip in sales of records.

1921: Independent record companies win the right to make lateral cut records, a technique previously owned by Victor.

1926: Recording at 33 1/3 RPM is introduced by the Vitaphone Co. They do it to keep in sync with talking pictures. They use 16-inch acetate-coated shellac discs on players run by electric motors. The disc size and speed allows it to last the same length of time as a reel of film.

1926: A featherweight stylus is produced and sold by Charles Brush. It is called the piezo-electric.

1928: The Jazz Singer is released. It is the first commercial sound film with audible dialogue.

1927: The jukebox is introduced by the Automatic Music Instrument Co.
jukebox
1928: The Radio Corporation of America (RCA) buys out the Victor Talking Machine Company and RCA Victor is born.

1930: Bing Crosby records his first solo record, “I Remember Dear,” and becomes the nation’s most popular singer.

1931: Alan Blumlein develops stereo recording, which he calls “binaural” at Bell Telephone laboratories.

1931: EMI studio asks Alan Blumlein to install his stereo recording system in its Abbey Road studios in London, which is the largest sound recording studio in the world at this time.

1934: Wurlitzer introduces multiple-selection juke boxes

1939: Magnetic tape on which sounds can be recorded is invented.

1940: Vinyl to be used as a material to make records is introduced as a replacement for shellac, which is in short supply due to the invasion of South East Asia by the Japanese. Production of records was practically halted until this solution comes about.

1940s: Enter the DJ: Persons with the essential equipment of a turntable, a pile of records, and a basic amplifier become very popular as they entertain troops in mess halls across Europe and Asia during WWII, “spinning” Glen Miller, the Andrews Sisters, and Benny Goodman.

1948: Columbia introduces the 12-inch 33 1/3 RPM microgroove Long Play (LP) vinylite record and compatible turntable. The record has 23 minutes of play time on each side .

1949: RCA Victor introduces the 7-inch 45 rpm microgroove vinyl single and compatible turntable.

1949: Capitol becomes the first major label to support all three recording speeds of 78, 45, 33-1/3 RPM.

1949: The Top 40 is started by Todd Storz from the KOWH radio station.

todd

1950: The decline of 78 RPM shellac disc begins as the new vinyl records become more popular. This is because they sound better and are now cheaper to make.

1950: RCA Victor releases records in the Columbia 12-inch LP format.

1951: Columbia releases records in the RCA 7-inch 45 rpm format.

1951: The first Jukebox that can play 7-inch 45 rpm records is introduced.

1953-1954: Bill Haley releases his first national rock hit “Crazy Man Crazy” on the Essex label. He follows that the next year with his hits “Shake, Rattle and Roll” and “Rock Around the Clock.”

1954: Record companies begin delivering 7-inch 45 rpm record singles to radio stations instead of 78s. This and the rising popularity of the 33 1/3 format for full albums results in the beginning of the end for the 78 RPM format.

1956: An in-car turntable is introduced by Chrysler for its Imperial model. The special record plays 7-inches that have “ultramicrogrooves” at 16-2/3 RPM. The player was developed by Peter Goldmark, the same person who invented the 33-1/3 RPM LP record format.

1957: The Recording Industry Association of America chooses the Westrex standard for stereo records, basically setting the world standard for stereo records.

1958: RCA introduces its first stereo LPs.

1963: Philips introduces the first compact audio cassette. Compact audio cassettes would affect the sales of records as the battle between records and cassettes would ensue.

1966: Brian Wilson produces “Pet Sounds.”

1966: “River Deep Mountain High” by Ike and Tina Turner and produced by Phil Spector with his trademark “Wall of Sound” is released.

1967: “Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” produced by George Martin and the Beatles is released.

sgt peppers.png

1969: Kool Herc, considered by many to be the first hip-hop DJ, develops “Cutting Breaks,” in which he would chant over instrumental or percussion sections of songs he was spinning at clubs. He would extend the breaks indefinitely by using an audio mixer to switch between two identical records on two different turntables.

1975: Grand Wizard Theodore invents the scratch.

Late 70s: Technics adds pitch control to its SL-1200 model, a direct result of the DJ influence.

1979: Grandmaster Flash develops the “breakbeat,” a looping of the instrumental sections on House records.

1980: The compact disc is developed by Philips Electronics N.V. and Sony Corporation as a digital means of storing audio recordings and data.

1980s: 12″ disco records that included long percussion breaks (ideal for mixing) contribute to the emergence of House Music.

1981: Grandmaster Flash’s 1981 single “The Adventures of Grandmaster Flash on the Wheels of Steel” is released. It is the first record to demonstrate hip-hop dee-jaying skills.

flash

1982: The first digital audio 5-inch CD discs are marketed.

1983: Hip-hop DJs in New York begin to use the spin back capabilities of the Technics 1200 turntable for “scratching,” and to extend grooves and “breaks” by cutting back and forth between two copies of the same record as first done by Grandmaster Flash.

1987: The Disco Mix Club holds its first annual DJ Competition.

1988: For the first time ever, CD sales surpass record sales, and CDs and cassette tapes become the two dominant consumer audio listening formats.

2001: The National Association of Music Merchandisers (NAMM) officially recognizes the turntable as an instrument. It outsells guitars at a 2-1 ratio.

Present: Despite the digital revolution, vinyl records are kept alive and still produced on a small scale primarily due to Turntablism and to a lesser extent by those devoted to collecting records.


  • Weaver, Brian. “Record Collector’s Resource: A History of Records.” Record Collector’s Resource: A History of Records. N.p., n.d. Web. 17 Mar. 2017. <http://www.cubby.net/worldofcubby/RCR/record_history.html&gt;.
  • Sgt. Pepper’s Photo –“Sgt. Peppers Turns 49!” Woodstock. N.p., 1 June 2016. Web. 17 Mar. 2017.
  • Grandmaster Flash Photo -L., Troy. “Grand Wizzard Theodore.” Grand Wizzard Theodore. N.p., 28 July 2005. Web. 17 Mar. 2017. 
  • Todd Storz Photo -“Radio’s Revolution & The World’s Happiest Broadcasters”.” History Of Top 40 Radio. N.p., n.d. Web. 17 Mar. 2017.       
  • Jukebox Photo -“Juke Boxes.” IWC Media Ecology Wiki / Juke Boxes. N.p., n.d. Web. 17 Mar. 2017.                                                                                                                                                                    

5 Tips on how to keep your vinyl in perfect shape!

While adventuring around a local flee market, I met a seller named Dan. Dan had been collecting vinyl since he was a kid, and has been buying and selling for the past few decades. He had hundreds of different genres of music to go through, and was extremely helped when I asked about certain records. When I asked Dan what is something he wishes he could tell people who are starting to collect vinyl (or have been collecting for years), he didn’t hesitate to give me his 5 tips on keeping vinyl in perfect shape. So here they are…

1. Eliminate Contact to playing surface.

Always try to eliminate contact with the playing surface. When handling and playing records, hold the disk by the outer edge and label.

record

 

2. Always store your records vertically.

Always store records vertically, leaning as little as possible but not too tight either. You should be able to easily and freely insert and remove a record from between two others without moving them. Storing records too tightly or horizontally can promote ring wear on the cover or sleeve and cause unnecessary stress to the record’s materials, surface and label, resulting in warps and contact damage.

nooo

 

3. Records are for cool, dry areas.

It is best to store records in a cool, dry area. Avoid any source of heat, moisture and humidity. Warmth, humidity and moisture are ideal conditions for mold, mildew and other fungi which can infest the cover, label and the insides of the grooves. And always make sure that your playback equipment is set and adjusted correctly and that the stylus is not worn… Extreme damage can result.

storage

 

4. Invest in Record Sleeves.

Plastic covers protect the cover of the album, this helps from friction between two albums, erasing the picture on the cover and/or back. The good thing about plastic covers is that they are usually sold in large amounts (like 50 or 100) for a cheap price.

sleeves

Link to buy 100 record sleeves off Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/RPM-Record-Sleeves-100-Count/dp/B003NG2WIG

 

5. Also invest in a microfiber brush!

Before and/or after every play use a microfiber brush, such as a RCA Discwasher, Vinyl Styl brush or other type of device, to remove dust and dirt that can collect while playing. Make sure to follow the instructions that come with your brush.

brush

Link to buy a microfiber brush on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/AudioQuest-LP-record-clean-brush/dp/B0006VMBHI

My Top 10 Favorite Albums

Just like Rolling Stone Magazine, I have decided I would make my own list of my all time favorite albums, just a little smaller. In my nineteen years of living, I have listened to many albums, thanks to my father (who was a former dj). I hope after looking into this post you will find some new music to enjoy! (THESE ARE IN NO PATICULAR ORDER!)

  • The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars // David Bowie

ziggyFrom my personal vinyl collection, The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and The Spiders From Mars album is by far my favorite album by the amazing and talented David Bowie. Each song is unique in its own way, starting with Five Years, a song about an Earth doomed to destruction in five years and the aftermath knowledge, and ending with Rock ‘n’ Suicide, a song about Ziggy’s final collapse as an old, washed-up rock star and, as such was also the closing number of the Ziggy Stardust live show. Some other creditable songs from the album are Ziggy Stardust, Moonage Daydream, Starman, Suffragette City, and Soul Love.

Check it out, you won’t regret it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IWm03wYBTbM&list=PL7CF48CA8CD7B6094

  • Wings Over America // Paul McCartney and Wings

wings

I am not a big fan of live albums, but Paul McCartney and Wings killed this one. 28 Songs, 5 of which being Beatles songs. The entire album was recorded during the band’s stay in the United State for their 1975-76 Wings Over the World Tour. Rolling Stone magazine gave this album three and a half stars, which doesn’t mean anything. This album is hit after hit after hit!  One of the coolest facts about this album is that McCartney’s sound engineer listened to 800 hours of tape and selected the five best performances of each song from the 30-song set list, that’s my new dream job. Some of my favorite songs off this album are Venus and Mars/Rock Show/Jet, Maybe I’m Amazed, Live and Let Die, My Love and Band on The Run.

Check out my man, McCartney, and Wing’s work on this album: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=laVW6bRU6Wg

  • The Stranger // Billy Joel

strangerI am a HUGE fan of Billy Joel, have it be 52nd Street or Glass House his music is always a go to. But, hands down, The Stranger is his BEST album. Most of this album is in his long list of greatest hits. With songs like Movin’ Out (Anthony’s Song), Vienna, She’s Always a Woman, Only the Good Die Young, and Just The Way You Are. Lyrically, the album’s approach is decidedly narrative; each song tells a story. The seven-and-a-half-minute epic “Scenes From an Italian Restaurant” began as a shorter song entitled “The Ballad of Brenda and Eddie,” which became the third section of “Italian Restaurant.”

Check it out: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gFy1BMaYRh0

  • Rumors // Fleetwood Mac

rumorsThere are great albums, and then there is Fleetwood Mac’s Rumors. There isn’t anything I can say able this album that hasn’t already been said. This is a masterpiece, truly. Relationships and break ups with the band, the hedonistic behavior and interpersonal strife among Fleetwood Mac members; these experiences shaped the album’s lyrics. In 1978, Fleetwood Mac won album of the year, along with Rumors selling 45 million copies, which makes it one of the best selling albums ever. There isn’t a single song on this album that isn’t worth listening to, every song is a hit. Within the lyrics you can feel the emotions of each person in the band.

PLEASE PLEASE PLEASEEE LISTEN TO THIS ALBUM IF YOU HAVE NOT: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ul-cZyuYq4&list=PLe1LDmd-Z_b8byH7DqTVhdzmI7ViidUHY&index=5

  • Revolver // The Beatles

revolverI am the biggest Beatles fan, I mean I have Let It Be tattooed on my body! That dedication. Revolver, I believe was the beginning of the change that the Beatles would take with their music, to a more psychedelic rock sound. It is said that this album challenged all the conventions of pop through its mix of novel sounds and the unusual subject matter of the songs. Some of the best songs off this album are Got to Get You into My Life, For No One, Here, There and Everywhere, Eleanor Rigby, and Taxman. But its John Lennon’s work on Tomorrow Never Knows that was known as the greatest leap into the future of the Beatles’ recording career, and Paul McCartney’s vocals in For No One and Here, There and Everywhere that will leave you with chills.

Complete album not available online…

  • Boston // Boston

boston

Did you know Boston is the fastest selling debut album ever? That already says a lot. Many music industry insiders thought a guitar-heavy rock record wouldn’t make much of a dent in the charts as disco ruled the airwaves at the time. But Boston sure proved them wrong with their self titled album. With great hits such as More Than a Feeling, Peace of Mind, Foreplay/Long Time, and Rock &Roll Band. This album is one of my favorite road trip albums to sing along to!

  • Greatest Hits 1974-78 // Steve Miller Band

steve millerAnother one of my favorite road trip albums! I’m not a huge fan of Greatest Hits albums, but this one can get away with it. Every song makes you want to dance around and feel good! Once this album plays I immediately go into relax mode. Jungle Love, Take the Money and Run, Rock’n me, The Joker, Fly Like an Eagle, and Jet Airliner will for sure make you get up and dance and sing along!

  • Goodbye Yellow Brick Road // Elton Johnelton joh

Listed #91 on Rolling Stone Magazine’s list of the 500 greatest albums of all time, comes my all time favorite Elton John album. Selling over 30 million copies, this isn’t just a personal thought. Bennie and the Jets has to be the greatest song on the album, accompanied by Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, Candle in the Wind(a tribute to Marilyn Monroe), and Saturday Night’s Alright for Fighting. Originally intended as a regular single album, the experience in transferring from Jamaica to the château proved to be conducive to producing such quality material that it was released as a double album.

  • Abbey Road // The Beatles

abbey roadListed #14 on Rolling Stones 500 greatest albums of all time. The last album were all The Beatles participated together, immediately after the album was released there was major success, reaching #1 in the United States and United Kingdom. #1 is where this album belongs. The entire album is a masterpiece, with songs like Come Together, Something, Oh! Darling, I Want You (She’s So Heavy), and finally a beautiful song written by George Harrison, Here Comes The Sun. Which has to be the BEST song on the entire album, hands down. The entire album is almost impossible not to sing along to! My favorite part of this album is that almost all the songs run into the next one, like one big continuous song.

https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=abbey+road+album&&view=detail&mid=78085AEC2013B8C4153D78085AEC2013B8C4153D&FORM=VRDGAR

  • Are You Experienced? // The Jimi Hendrix Experiencejimi

As a proud Washingtonian, I have a strong love for Jimi Hendrix. Are You Experienced is the debut studio album by The Jimi Hendrix Experience. Released in 1967, the LP was an immediate critical and commercial success, and it is widely regarded as one of the greatest debuts in the history of rock music. The album features Jimi Hendrix’s innovative approach to songwriting and electric guitar playing which soon established a new direction in psychedelic and hard rock music. Some of the greatest rock songs of all times come from this one album; Purple Haze, Hey Joe, Fire, and Foxy Lady.

Full album not available online…

The Record Store Vibe

In my last blog post, I asked teenager if they would buy original press vinyl. I was amazed to know that one of the teens had never been to an old, original record shop. So in this blog I will try my best to describe a record shop, after being to many.

record store

 

How to spot a record shop…

Most record stores, or at least the good ones I have been to, are located downtown in an older, smaller building. Sometimes these stores don’t have signs saying they’re a vinyl shop, but you can usually tell from the almost colorless band posters in the window faded from sitting in the sunlight for years (maybe even decades?)

Now once you’re inside…

You know a record store is going to be good when they have pictures of the owner with different bands and artist on the wall. It means they have a passion for their job. Now because these stores are located in smaller building, most of the time, is it going to be pretty packed in there. No. Not with people but with tables full of albums. With anything you want. And I mean anything. They’ll have anything from German polka to Frank Sinatra to Joan Jett. A lot of record stores sell original press vinyl, which in my first post about the history of vinyl means some really old stuff, so be aware that there will be a dusty smell along with a light cigarette smoke smell in the air. If its a problem, hold your breath, you don’t want to miss out on some great finds!

The People…

Second to the vinyl, people have to be my favorite part about record stores. Unlike buying on iTunes, you get real and genuine human interaction with purchasing at the record store. Yes, iTunes has a Suggested album spot, but you don’t gain a relationship with someone when buying from them or standing next to them while going through crates. I have been introduced to so many new bands from just talking to people while shopping. People I probably would have never through about listening to. You can always count on an older man with a long white pony tale in a Rush concert t-shirt from 1992 going through a box of Eagles albums to introduce you to a whole new world of music.


  • Picture from Stephen Frears 2000 movie “High Fidelity.”

 

What teens have to say…

The year is 1963, and you just heard The Beatles’ “I Want to Hold Your Hand” on the radio for the first time. The song was by far the BEST song you have ever heard, so of course you’re willing to drive an hour and a half out to the record store to buy it. You climb into your car, sit in traffic for twenty minuets, and go around the block seven times to find a parking spot…just to find out that they’re sold out of the “I Want to Hold Your Hand” 45.

Unlike later generations, today’s teens are lucky enough to live in a world were music is at the tip of their finger tips. They can buy whatever song they want, whenever and wherever they wantvinyl sales (as long as they have WIFI). But in the past 10 years sales in vinyl have sky rocketed! You are now able to find vinyl at any music store, and at almost any department store (like Fred Meyer, Target, and ever Wal-Mart!). Wondering why there was a sudden spike in vinyl sales, I decided to check out a well known store that sells vinyl (Urban Outfitters) at the mall and I asked some of the teenagers shopping there some questions…and got some interesting answers.

 

 

“Bowie and The Beatles aren’t relevant anymore!” – Katie (17)

I checked out Urban Outfitters, a place notorious for selling over priced clothes and vinyl. I was happy to see a few teens checking out their vinyl selection (but sad for their wallets). I watched the shoppers  before I went to ask them questions, I wanted to see what they were interested in that way I could ask specific questions. I spoke with three people while at Urban Outfitters:

  • Jaysen (16) – Likes Foo Fighters, Led Zeppelin, and Metallica. Jayson said that he was just beginning his vinyl collection.
  • Katie (17) – Likes Beyoncé, Fifth Harmony, and Melanie Martinez. Katie said that shes not looking for a collection, but owns a few.
  • Brooklyn (17) – Like The Beatles, Lady Gaga, and Panic! At the Disco. Brooklyn said she has a collection, but doesn’t plan on expanding it much.

Question #1 – Would/Do you ever buy reissued vinyl?

Jaysen: “Oh yeah. I buy reissued vinyl all the time. A lot of rock n roll. Its cool listening to the same album my dad did as a teen, the same way he did too.”

Brooklyn: “Not really, I own a few though. But those are albums my mother bought me because she wants to listen to Rumors (Fleetwood Mac) on vinyl like she did as a child.”

and my favorite answer…

Katie: “No. Bowie and The Beatles aren’t relevant anymore. They had their time back in the 1960’s, but its time to move on to better things.” Which was interesting coming from a girl in a Led Zeppelin t-shirt and a denim coat covered in bands patches.

Question #2 – Would you buy original press vinyl?

Jaysen: “Yeah, It would be a lot cheaper than buying $40 Led Zeppelin. I just don’t know where to go to find original press.”

Brooklyn: “No, but only because my father is a collector and has just about anything on vinyl that originally came out in the 1960’s-70’s”

Katie: I decided not to ask…

Question #4 – If you had to choose between listening to music digitally or on vinyl, what would you choose? (and if they chose digitally, I asked why they were buying vinyl).

Jaysen: “Definitely digitally, because the sound quality is so much better.” “Well you really got my there, I guess its because its retro and cool.”

Brooklyn: “Digitally, I can take my music wherever with me! I can listen to it in the car, at school.” “Honestly, I started buying because it brought my dad and I closer musically. But then he started giving me a hard time about buying new albums on vinyl.”

Katie: “Digitally, I want to listen to my songs when and wherever.” “Because its the new and cool thing to do, I wouldn’t buy vinyl if it wasn’t cool.”

 

So after asking these questions, I came to the conclusion that the reason why most teenagers are purchasing vinyl is because its a fad. There are teenagers who are purchasing vinyl because the cool, edgy girl at school posts pictures of them on Instagram, while there are teens who are passionate about music and where is started and where its going. Although, digitally is the better and easier way to listen to music, you can’t beat the pops you hear from putting the needle on your favorite album.

 


 

  • “File:Global Vinyl Sales Graph In US$.png.” Wikipedia. Wikimedia Foundation, 17 Mar. 2017. Web. 20 Mar. 2017.           
  • Beyoncé, U2, and Lady Gaga albums were from Urban Outfitter’s website.