[78-L] The Origin of the Album (and other tall tales)

Rodger Holtin rjh334578 at yahoo.com
Thu Sep 1 15:36:42 PDT 2011


Scroll past the first sentence and it's really pretty good once he explains some things - and Steinweiss is not crowned king of album art, either.  The picture of the huge stack of 78s vs the armload of LPs is a new one on me - better than the usual one with them stacked on the table.
 
Remember, too, this is from a Canadian, eh :-)  

Rodger

For Best Results use Victor Needles.

.

--- On Thu, 9/1/11, agp <agp2176 at verizon.net> wrote:


From: agp <agp2176 at verizon.net>
Subject: Re: [78-L] The Origin of the Album (and other tall tales)
To: "78-L Mail List" <78-l at klickitat.78online.com>
Date: Thursday, September 1, 2011, 5:43 AM


At 22:21 31/08/2011, KS wrote:
>Tony wrote:
>
> > For those who need entertainment, scoot over to:
> >
> > http://www.capitol6000.com/album.html
> >
> > Be forewarned -- the first sentence is:
> >
> > "The Long Playing album (LP) was born in the early 20th century after
> > technological innovations, governmental restrictions and marketing
> > strategies to boost sales. "
> >
>--
>Basically he's correct.
>The LP was born in the early 20th century, although it took some time:
>from 1932-1948. 1932 is pretty early, isn't it?
>Technological innovations...yes, definitely.
>Governmental restrictions...he means the enforced shellac exchange, I guess.
>Marketing strategies...are always at hand.

I see your point, but I think its a stretch, especially to use the 
term 'LP' as that term (trademarked by Columbia, correct?). 'Early 
20th century' to me says 1906 -- or a train that arrived before its 
time (an possibly obscure reference some US folk may get)

T

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