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Ah! But has anybody got any 78’s?
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I’ve just digitised mine and stored them on a DVD for the time being until I can get round to making a few CD’s. |
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got rid of my 78s many years ago, not worth much,also weight n storage was a factor.plus they break easy n the kids were little.;)
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That’s why anyone who has them should think about digitising the music cashy. I know that old records may be valuable in their own right but so is the music. Anyone got any of the single sided 78’s or even the 12” ones? |
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Don't think you can get steel needles now. I play mine on a little portable record player with a needle which plays either vinyl or shellac.
To be quite honest, 78s are an inconvenient way to listen to music - they're heavy, unwieldy and very, very fragile and the sound quality's usually not up to much. I just like 'em! |
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You must be able to get needles for playing vinyl because they still sell tunrtables. Anybody know where they sell the needles?
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I’m disappointed Wynnonie Harris! I thought you played your 78’s on a windup gramophone with a horn and everything and maybe even little Nipper listening with you. Think of the exercise that you could get winding the handle. To those who haven’t a clue what I’m on about, Nipper was the name of the dog as he listened to His Master’s Voice on the gramophone. Used as the HMV logo. See picture.
The sound quality may not be a patch on the sterile sounds from modern record players but it had that special olde worlde character about it that makes 78’s music so special. Well it does for old gits like me. And that is why I sampled all of my 78’s and turned them into digital sound, to preserve that sound. Apart from that the fragility of 78’s means that they are always liable to be broken accidentally and once broken that is that. Except that is not necessarily so. I have a Beniamino Gigli 78 that is cracked from the hole in the centre right across the record so there are about 200 loud licks as the stylus crosses the crack. But I have been able to eliminate each one so that you cannot hear it. Well I haven’t actually finished yet but those clicks that I have sorted, you can’t hear. They are still there, it’s just that you can’t hear them. I should finish it any year now. The needles that were mentioned weren’t referring to styli for turntables WillowTheWhisp. You can still get those at any decent record shop. These were actual steel needles – a bit like a very fat pin without the head that got clamped in the diaphragm of the pick-up arm. Believe it or not after a number of plays of the old 78’s the steel needle had the point worn off and you had to replace it with a new one. All gramophones had a small well in the unit that held spare needles. |
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Thank Wynonie! Brian |
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When I was a teenager, in the 50s, I had loads of 78s, Elvis, Little Richard, Buddy Holly etc., etc., all the rock'n'roll hits. I got married in 1962 and didn't have a record player, or much storage space, in my new home so I left the records in my parents' attic.
In 1964 my parents moved to Feniscowles and, without a word to me, gave my collection to a jumble sale. :eek: My son assures me that the collection I had would now be worth over £500. I never quite forgave mum and dad. :( |
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Somewhere I've got an old wooden box with "Perophone" indented into the lid. It used to contain gramophone needles and is all I have left now of an old windup gramophone with horn that I used to have. I kept it at my Gran's in the 'glory hole' where I used to play my 78s on it but when she died it was chucked out along with the rest of her stuff :(
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