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How To Record Songs From Gramophone To Cd

Can you play a vinyl record on a phonograph?

What kind of phonograph and what kind of record? Most 78 rpm records are shellac and are meant to be played with single use steel needles on mechanical (acoustic) phonographs (Approx. 1935 and earlier). Later 78's are thinner shellac and then vinyl and are meant to be played on electric phonographs with diamond styli. Later 45 rpm and 33⅓ "LP" records are designed for play on modern multi-speed phonographs or turntables with very fine diamond styli. As an addendum early 78's may be played on modern equipment without fear of damage to them for the most part, although without the proper size stylus they may not sound as good as they can. I have left out most of the finer details, but these are the basics. Hope this helps.

Regards,
J.

What's the difference between gramophone records and vinyl records?

A gramophone record (also phonograph record, or simply record) is an analogue sound recording medium consisting of a flat disc with an inscribed modulated spiral groove starting near the periphery and ending near the center of the disc. Gramophone records were the primary technology used for personal music reproduction for most of the 20th century. They replaced the phonograph cylinder in the 1900s, and although they were supplanted in popularity in the late 1980s by digital media, they have since become the medium of choice for many music afficionados, especially in the electronica genre.

The terms LP record (LP, 33, or 33-1/3 rpm record), EP, 16-2/3 rpm record (16), 45 rpm record (45), and 78 rpm record (78) each refer to specific types of gramophone records. Except for the LP and EP (which are contractions of Long Play and Extended Play respectively), these type designations refer to their rotational speeds in revolutions per minute (RPM). LPs, 45s, and 16s are usually made of polyvinyl chloride (PVC), and hence may be referred to as vinyl records or simply vinyl.

In the 1970s, could the record players repeat the same song or repeat the entire phonograph record?

Repeating the whole side of a record was a common function.Here is a detail from a Pioneer turntable from 1976 showing the feature — but nearly any “fully automatic” (higher end) turntable from this era would have had a disc-repeat feature.As to repeating individual tracks, this didn’t arrive (to my knowledge) until the early-1980s (not coincidentally around the time CD specs started to appear), in the form of the linear-tracking turntables that could “see” the gap between tracks and therefore randomly access (or repeat) tracks. Here’s one that I had:You could select which tracks on the album side you wanted to play (and in what order) and, if desired, repeat the sequence forever.

Can a Gramophone that plays 78 RPM records play a 33 RPM record?

So, I'm wanting to get my girlfriend the Tool Aenima Vinyl album for our Anniversary. The listing shows that it's a 33 RPM record. And I found a Gramophone on Ebay that plays 77 RPM records. To the untrained eye (myself) this seems incompatible, but I want to be absolutely SURE because I can't find a Gramophone reproduction that plays 33's. It's important to me that I get her the old style record player with the horn. Thanks for answering!

Before computers, what was music recorded onto?

first came the bakelite cylinder, then the disc, then plastic phonograph records, then magnetic wire , then magnetic tape and now DVD and CD.

What is the Phonograph?

Usage of these terms is not uniform across the English-speaking world (see below). In more modern usage, this device is often called a turntable, record player, or record changer.

The famous phonograph was the first device for recording and replaying sound. The term phonograph ("sound writer") is derived from the Greek words φωνή (meaning "sound" or "voice" and transliterated as phone) and γραφή (meaning "writing" and transliterated as graphe). Similar related terms gramophone and graphophone have similar root meanings. The coinage, particularly the use of the -graph root, may have been influenced by the then-existing words phonographic and phonography, which referred to a system of phonetic shorthand; in 1852 The New York Times carried an advertisement for "Professor Webster's phonographic class", and in 1859 the New York State Teachers' Association tabled a motion to "employ a phonographic recorder" to record its meetings.

F. B. Fenby was the original author of the word phonograph. An inventor in Worcester, Massachusetts, he was granted a patent in 1863 for an unsuccessful device called the "Electro-Magnetic Phonograph".[1] His concept detailed a system that would record a sequence of keyboard strokes onto paper tape. Although no model or workable device was ever made, it is often seen as a link to the concept of punched paper for player piano rolls (1880s), as well as Herman Hollerith's punch card tabulator (used in the 1890 census), a distant precursor of the modern computer.

Arguably, any device used to record sound or reproduce recorded sound could be called a type of "phonograph", but in common practice it has come to mean historic technologies of sound recording.

In the late 19th and early 20th century, the alternative term talking machine was sometimes used.

How to use Phonograph in a sentence?

Phonograph is a commonly used device for playing recorded sound from 1870 through 1980 ( some still using them now) which has the similar function as the CD PLAYERS,DVD PLAYERS,etc.of today. So it is easy to use it in a sentence either as in the subject or in the predicate.
Examples:1. I love listening music played on a phonograph.2. Different variations of old phonographs are on museum display these days. 3. We have a phonograph. 4. The phonograph was the first device for recording and replaying sound.
Oki, doki its your turn.

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