[78-L] Average age

George Anglin packardmarmon1940 at sbcglobal.net
Thu Nov 11 19:10:07 PST 2010


Bought my first car, a 1936 dodge coupe in 1960 when I got my license. Still have it 50 years later and after two engine rebuilds, a paint job and upholstery, still drives like a dream. Bought my first record in 1957, Leo Reisman on columbia "Cause I Feel Low Down" and flip "In A bamboo Garden" Hundreds of plays and still sounds priceless. Nuf said. Packard Marmon

--- On Thu, 11/11/10, Royal Pemberton <ampex354 at gmail.com> wrote:

From: Royal Pemberton <ampex354 at gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [78-L] Average age
To: "78-L Mail List" <78-l at klickitat.78online.com>
Date: Thursday, November 11, 2010, 6:44 PM

I'm 46, and was born when my dad was 41 and my mother 40.  (The US number 1
record at the time was 'I want to hold your hand' by the Beatles--on 78s in
India!)  Dad had bought records since the 1940s, but had left most all his
78s at my grandparents' house, so exploring the records there was something
out of another world to everything around me at home and in the rest of the
world.  All records have been fascinating to me, but there was always
something remarkable about those old fragile things, a certain immediacy and
impact, that the slower speed records had less of.

I also agree about the CD thing and the buzz (in a sense) you get from the
experience of actually handling vintage media and interacting with it to
hear what's recorded on them, be they records or other things like
reel-to-reel tapes or spools of wire (and I have some of each of those too).

On Fri, Nov 12, 2010 at 12:18 AM, Kristjan Saag <saag at telia.com> wrote:

> Cary Ginell wrote:
>
>  > There aren't many consumer goods from 70-80 years ago that are still
> functioning and able of being enjoyed in today's world.
> --
> Heard of antique stores?
> They sell china, furniture, clocks, fountain pens, crystal, lamps,
> books, magazines, postcards, musical instruments, pottery, toys,
> teddy-bears, kitchen-ware, clothes, door-knobs, water-pipes, jewels,
> linen, binoculars, tennis rackets...
> Most of the stuff works. Enjoyed by some, dismissed by others.
> But there's nothing like playing a tennis match with a 1930's wooden
> racket and without tie-break.
> Kristjan
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