Комментарии:
Not the meme opening music 😭 XDDD
ОтветитьEver wonder why all those guys in old pictures has eye patches ? 😊
ОтветитьPetty much like Santa's work shop andOSHA approved no doubt.
ОтветитьIncredible the amount of man hours that go into making a record
Without mentioning the sourcing of ingredients and building such factories
THANK YOU for posting this!
ОтветитьPiano music is so irritating. Had to mute it.
Ответить😊
ОтветитьRecords is a crap Versus Reel to Reel technology,
ОтветитьI have made my own recording lathe and now I am perfecting wax and acetate substrates to record on.
ОтветитьHow was shellac records like from vinyl?
ОтветитьWho plays hat piano ? It sounds so good. .. I hope you tell me I would love to know.
ОтветитьA long drawn-out process it's a wonder they ever made a recording lol
ОтветитьNow they can run an acoustic or electric recording through a digital process and make it like the record was just recorded yesterday!
Ответитьvery medievil mmmm and shellac lungs too mmmm
ОтветитьTHE TRITE ADDED MUSIC IS AN UTTER DISTRACTION
ОтветитьWonderful!
ОтветитьI like that little dance at the end! 👍👍
ОтветитьIt’s amazing how they handled all those chemicals with bare hands, and breathing in all the fumes. They must have died horrible deaths.
ОтветитьPreserve old time....culture record store this way....gorgeous time then...
ОтветитьI wish this video were made a year later.
ОтветитьAs I hold a mint copy of a Columbia 12" 78 titled; ROBERT BURNS--A Man Amongst Men. By the Prime Minister The Rt. Hon. J. RAMSAY MacDONALD, M.P. (Burns Anniversary, January 25th) The year not mentioned but guess about 1928. These Columbia records were of extremely high quality totally smooth surface without surface noise perfected. This film should have been a education to E.M.I.
Considering the emphasis placed to quality involved here Columbia laminated all their 78rpm records until the 1931 E.M.I. takeover.
Thereafter surface quality dipped a bit due to E.M.I. & also Decca not laminating their new releases.
A silent film about making records. There's gotta be some irony in that!
ОтветитьI love those old 78s.
ОтветитьInteresting how they made a master back then! Recording tape didn't come into use in the U.S. until 1948, and the first company to use it here was Capitol Records...which label was started because Johnny Mercer and Glen Wallichs and Buddy DeSylva didn't have the capital to take over a company like Columbia or RCA. Columbia belonged to EMI until the U.S. Government made them sell it off. EMI maintained release arrangements with Columbia until 1951, and with RCA until 1957. EMI acquired Capitol Records in 1956. You may or may not know that Capitol originally rejected releasing Beatles recordings twice in 1962.
ОтветитьThis is the English Columbia company,not the American Columbia company.
ОтветитьThat last bit...
*"Francesca, darling! I've just got the latest hit from the Savoy Orpheans: do let's put it on and Charleston ourselves into oblivion!"*🤣
The process of sound recordings had been perfected by the 1920's yet movie films were still silent! Thanks for posting this good quality video of the sound recording process from the 1920's!
ОтветитьColumbia Records have a Cricket Club......! What?
ОтветитьJust a guess but I think one third of the workers you see have been through Ellis Island, one third are children of parents who have been through Ellis Island and one third have pre Civil War ancestors. Discuss and comment.
ОтветитьEhhh....Back in my day sonny, we made records like......
ОтветитьPeople these days would drop dead from complaining if they had to do that level of work! Society has gotten so nauseatingly lazy! Technology makes you weak!
ОтветитьToo bad this video doesn't attempt to sync Stravinsky's actual electrical recording to this footage instead of the solo piano.
ОтветитьWow! The way that a song is released is totally different from how it's done now. Then, It was Labor intensive, and took a lot of time and effort. Now, anyone could record a song on their phone, and release it to Spotify. Man, I'd love to live in the 20's and work at Columbia!
ОтветитьThis looks like the English Columbia. If so, the studio was on Petty France in Westminster, London W1.
The film seems crude for 1928. And there is evidence of the acoustical recording. However Stravinsky's first recording were Petrushka and Firebird at Petty France in 1928 which authenticates this.
If I may ask, where is the source for this film?
ОтветитьThe most surviving shellacs have massive shellac, no layers.
ОтветитьIt was the same principle as done till the 1990's. Only differences were, that they record the performance on tape first (this began in the 1940's in Germany) that they changed the material of the cutted disc to lacquer coated steel platters and later to copper discs (DMM process), that they enhanced the way to coat the recorded disc with a silver layer, the use of smaller grooves and the pressing in vinyl, what was possible, when customers stopped to want discs, that can be played without any electricity.
ОтветитьI downloaded an mp3 this morning. I understand it was manufactured in exactly the same way!
ОтветитьThe only brand in recorded music to have survived from cylinder records to downloads.
ОтветитьHow staggeringly labour-intensive it all was - and working with that fine powder with no breathing protection! No wonder they sold at a significant fraction of the average worker's weekly pay.
The recording studios are at 73/75 Petty France, a narrow street near St James' Park underground station. The site is now Clive House one of the buildings of the (Orwellian-sounding) Ministry of Justice. Columbia left there for HMV's Abbey Road studios in 1932, having merged with HMV in 1931 to create EMI.
It's a wonderful film. The dance band conductor has a look akin to Debroy Somers; and he's wearing sunglasses because of the glare of the film (arc) lights. Though, I doubt that the conductor really stood in the way of the Westrex carbon-button microphone atop its amplifier and power supply!
Fantastic! I wonder if that was Percival Mackey's Band? Looks to be about 1925-27.. The old Columbia factory in Wandsworth I suppose. I wonder how many of these people got jobs at the Hayes plant after Wandsworth closed?
Ответить