evolution of the turntable
Transcription
evolution of the turntable
EVOLUTION OF THE TURNTABLE JAN 1857 NOV 1877 Leon Scott de Martinville’s Phonautograph Thomas Edison’s phonograph Thomas Edison invented the tinfoil cylinder phonograph, which made the first recording of the human voice. The “phonautograph” was the first device capable of recording sound signals. JAN 1896 NOV 1887 Using The Gramophone Gramophone A guy by the name of Emile Berliner adapted Martinville’s idea into a disc music player he called the “gramophone.” Eldridge Johnson is the first to use the spring motor record player in a handcranked motorised gramophone for Berliner in 1896. 1906 Vinyl Records Vinyl records, were a huge uproar in the early 19th century. Records were designed first for the gramophone. The record was a disk, about twice the size of a regular CD, and it would be placed on top of the gramophone, then a needle would be placed on top of the record. By turning the crank handle on the side of the gramophone, the needle would move across the disk and make sound vibrations, that were amplified through the gramophones speaker. OCT 1930 The Turntable Invented by Daniel Leland Cooley. The turntable, was not much of a hit when it was invented, but it sky rocketed in the 1970s. People called “Disk Jockeys”, or what we call “DJs”, used the turntables to play multiple songs at parties, concerts, and more. The turntable also invented a technique DJ’s used called scratching, when you move the vinyl disk back and forth. In the next coming decades, the turntables became huge, and DJing was taken to a whole next level! FEB 1949 Long Playing Record Long playing Records, (LPs) were another type of record disk. This type of disk, was much different than the others. The LPs’ allowed for people to listen to artists albums all on one disk. LPs allowed artists to record them singing entire albums of music. After recording, companies made thousands of copies of the artists songs on a long playing record. The world’s first direct-drive turntable, creating a new era in audio. This design continues to be the basis of modern turntables. 1970 1962 Technics SP-10 Portable Stereo Henry Kloss developed the first portable stereo: KLH Model 11.