The Phonograph as a Mass Entertainment Medium: Its Development, Adaptation, and Pervasiveness 1877-1932 |
Contents
Vehicles for Phonographic Research | 18 |
B Periodicals Contemporary with the Phono | 25 |
Research Resources Archives | 30 |
19 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
acceptance acoustical adaptation advertising Allen Koenigsberg Amberola American Graphophone Company American homes American Phonograph Company basic Bell and Tainter Berliner Gramophone Berliner Gramophone Company Berliner's Catalogue celluloid chapter characteristics Charles Batchelor Columbia Columbia Phonograph Company Columbia Records commercial communication cylinder machines cylinder recording disc machines disc recording duplicates early Edison Phonograph Eldridge electric electroplating entertainment machines Gramo Gramophone record granted graph groove invention Johnson Louis Glass machines and records mass medium master mechanical messages molded cylinders molding process National Gramophone North American Phonograph October pantographic pervasiveness phono Phonogram phonograph industry Phonograph Monthly phonograph's development played popular production published radio Read and Welch record producers Recorded Sound recording and reproducing recording industry saturation Scientific American Seaman sell society sold sound recording sound waves spring motor Talking Machine Company Tinfoil Victor Talking Machine Victrola virtually wax cylinders wax recording York Zonophone