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Berliner Gramophone Record

American History Museum

Berliner disk record
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  • Berliner disk record

    Object Details

    referenced

    Cullen, Joseph
    Collins, William

    maker

    Berliner, Emile

    Description

    Emile Berliner, a German immigrant who settled in Washington, D.C., profoundly influenced the direction of early sound-recording technology. In November 1887 he patented the first of a series of inventions that would result in a commercially successful disk record and a machine to play it on--the gramophone.
    This rare rubber record is about 7 inches in diameter. It was made in May 1898 and donated to the museum by Berliner himself. According to information inscribed by hand in the center of the disk, it plays a banjo duet of the tune "Narcissus," performed by Joseph Cullen and William Collins.
    Part of Berliner's success stemmed from his process that permitted mass-production of sound recordings. In that process, a performer made a master recording, a mold of that master was made, and then, from that mold, multiple disks could be pressed.
    In contrast, Berliner's main competition—Edison's phonograph and the Bell-Tainter graphophone—played recordings made on wax cylinders with vertically cut grooves. At first, the only way to make multiple copies of these cylinders was to make multiple originals, but by about 1900 a process for making mass-producing cylinders was devised. In the meantime Berliner's disk recordings, longer playing and more durable than cylinders, won over consumers. Berliner's design for a laterally cut disk record, playing at 78 revolutions per minute, became the industry standard.
    Berliner experimented with a variety of materials for records, including glass, celluloid, and hard rubber. He eventually settled on a shellac compound called Duranoid. Other manufacturers adopted the compound as well and continued to make records with it until the late 1940s. In search of a more durable material, Columbia Records introduced the vinyl long-playing 33 rpm disk record and RCA the three-minute 45-rpm disk.

    Location

    Currently not on view

    Credit Line

    Emile Berliner

    date made

    1898-05

    ID Number

    ME.308322

    catalog number

    308322

    accession number

    71816

    Object Name

    phonorecord
    sound recording

    Physical Description

    wax (overall material)

    Measurements

    overall - catalog card: 7 in; x 17.78 cm
    overall: 1/4 in x 8 1/2 in; x .635 cm x 21.59 cm

    Related Publication

    Smart, James. R. Emile Berliner and Nineteenth-Century Disc Recordings
    Emile Berliner and the Birth of the Recording Industry

    See more items in

    Work and Industry: Mechanisms
    Music & Musical Instruments
    Popular Entertainment
    Industry & Manufacturing
    National Treasures exhibit

    Data Source

    National Museum of American History

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a6-a9a3-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

    Record ID

    nmah_852763
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