Berliner Gramophone – its discs identified with an etched-in "E. Berliner's Gramophone" as the logo – was the first (and for nearly ten years the only) disc record label in the world. Its records were played on Emile Berliner 's invention, the Gramophone, which competed with the wax cylinder–playing phonographs that were more common in the 1890s and could record.
34-782: Emile Berliner received U.S. patents 372,786 and 382,790 on the Gramophone on November 8, 1887, and May 15, 1888, respectively. This was before the organization of the North American Phonograph Company , which first produced cylinder recordings for public use, and thus Berliner 's flat disc record is roughly contemporary with the exploitation of the cylinder medium, though it took longer for Berliner to commence production of his discs in America. Although based in Washington, D.C., Berliner's first joint venture
68-486: A 36-hp rotary engine for use in helicopters, an innovation on the heavier inline engines then in use. In 1909, Berliner founded the Gyro Motor Company in Washington, D.C. The company's principals included Berliner, president; Moore, designer and engineer; and Joseph Sanders (1877–1944), inventor, engineer, and manufacturer. The manager of the company was Spencer Heath (1876–1963), a mechanical engineer who
102-670: A Berliner subsidiary in St. Petersburg, Russia in 1901. E. Berliner Gramophone of Canada was established in 1899. It was first located in the Aqueduct Street building of Northern Electric in Montreal, and commenced marketing records and gramophones the following year. In 1904, the company received its charter as the Berliner Gram-o-phone Company of Canada. Early recordings were imported from masters recorded in
136-784: A helicopter built by Berliner and J. Newton Williams of Derby, Connecticut , had Williams "from the ground on three occasions" at Berliner's laboratory in the Brightwood neighborhood of Washington, D.C. Between 1907 and 1926, Berliner worked on technologies for vertical flight, including a lightweight rotary engine. Berliner obtained automobile engines from the Adams Company in Dubuque, Iowa, whose Adams-Farwell automobile used air-cooled three- or five-cylinder rotary engines developed in-house by Fay Oliver Farwell (1859–1935). Berliner, his assistant R.S. Moore, and Farwell developed
170-546: A negative-image "mother" made from them to stamp discs. A major reversal of Berliner's fortunes occurred when the mastering plant in Washington, D.C. burned down on September 29, 1897, destroying a hundred unissued masters and all of his record manufacturing equipment. Within a few months, however, Berliner was up and running again, with some record production aspects moved to Philadelphia. Berliner records were short-playing. Only about two minutes could comfortably fit on each single-sided 7-inch disc. The absolute maximum depended on
204-695: A nervous breakdown in 1914, also advocated for improvements in public health and sanitation . He also advocated for women's equality and, in 1908, established a scholarship program, the Sarah Berliner Research Fellowship , in honor of his mother. On August 3, 1929, Berliner died of a heart attack at his home at the Wardman Park Hotel in Washington, D.C., at the age of 78. He is buried in Rock Creek Cemetery in Washington, D.C., alongside his wife and
238-499: A transmitter is, beyond controversy, the invention of Edison". Berliner moved to Boston in 1877, where he became a United States citizen four years later. He worked for Bell Telephone until 1883, when he returned to Washington and established himself as a private researcher. Berliner also developed a rotary engine and an early version of the helicopter . According to a July 1, 1909, report in The New York Times ,
272-696: Is in the Fairmont-Girard alleyway. On June 16, 1922, Berliner and his son, Henry , demonstrated a helicopter for the United States Army . Henry became disillusioned with helicopters in 1925, and the company shut down. In 1926, Henry Berliner founded the Berliner Aircraft Company, which merged to become Berliner-Joyce Aircraft in 1929. Berliner's other inventions include a new type of loom for mass-production of cloth and an acoustic tile . Berliner, who suffered
306-872: The Boston Fadettes ) ·Berliner 967 (" La Donna è Mobile ", sung by F. A. Giannini (sic)), commonly considered as the first serious opera record ·Berliner 932X ("Viva il Vino", sung by Ferruccio Giannini ) ·Berliner 196 ("Whistling coon", sung by George W. Johnson ) ·Berliner 404 ("The Laughing song", sung by G. W. Johnson) ·Berliner 930Y and 0572 (" Miserere ", sung by Ferruccio Giannini) ·Berliner 940 (" Drill ye tarries, drill ", sung by George J. Gaskin ) ·Berliner 3312 ("Blue Bells of Scotland", trombone solo by Arthur Pryor ) ·Berliner 230 ("Commodore polka", cornet solo by W. Paris Chambers ) ·Berliner 3900 (" Carnival of Venice ", saxophone solo by Jean Moeremans ) ·Berliner 62 ("Romance for Trombone", trombone solo with band accompaniment) While these were not
340-623: The United States Gramophone Company in 1894. Berliner was born in Hanover , Germany, in 1851 into a Jewish merchant family. Though Jewish, he eventually became agnostic. He completed an apprenticeship to become a merchant, as was family tradition. While his real hobby was invention, he worked as an accountant to make ends meet. To avoid being drafted in the Franco-Prussian War , Berliner migrated to
374-410: The 1890s. Documenting the output of American Berliner has proved a daunting task, as original records are scarce collector's items and the company employed a system of block numbering that seems to make little sense. Although referred to commonly as "Berliner matrices", they are not true matrix numbers, but catalog numbers concerned with preserving the same number for each selection even if a given title
SECTION 10
#1732781119770408-566: The 1930s. Beginning in 1896, Berliner's gramophone players were made by Philadelphia-based machinist Eldridge Johnson , who added a spring motor to drive the previously hand-rotated turntable. Berliner also opened an office in New York City, staffed by Frank Seaman and O. D. LaDow and organized as the National Gramophone Company. Master recordings were made onto zinc plates, which were then electroplated and
442-536: The Berliner subsidiary in England which eventually took the name of Gramophone & Typewriter Ltd.; in 1931, this was one of the companies that was folded into EMI. That same year, Gaisberg established Berliner's German subsidiary as Deutsche Grammophon; this was the longest-lasting record company in history under its original charter, until finally being acquired by Universal Music Group in 1999. Gaisberg also founded
476-658: The United States of America in 1870 with a friend of his father's, in whose shop he worked in Washington, D.C. He moved to New York and, living off temporary work such a paper route and cleaning bottles, he studied physics at night at the Cooper Union Institute . After some time working in a livery stable, Berliner became interested in the new audio technology of the telephone and phonograph . He invented an improved telephone transmitter, one of
510-595: The United States until a recording studio in Montreal was established in 1906. The Berliner name as a record label lasted longest in Canada. In 1918, Emile Berliner's son Herbert Berliner left Berliner Gram-O-Phone and founded the Compo Company . Herbert's younger brother, Edgar, continued as chief executive of Berliner Gram-o-phone. In 1924, Canadian Berliner was bought out by USA's Victor and became Victor Talking Machine Company of Canada. Emile Berliner died in 1929 –
544-692: The brand later in the year. By 1905 it had regained the lead in the American disc record business, while by 1906 Seaman's Zonophone was on a receiver's index. In 1895, comic Billy Golden introduced Berliner to Fred Gaisberg , who, with Barry Peter Owen – a trusted associate within the National Gramophone Company – helped to establish Berliner's overseas interests. Although the German partnership with Kämmer & Reinhardt had long since ended, Berliner still held patents in Germany and England. In 1898, Owen founded
578-458: The case of block 900 (which was meant to be for popular and international songs, only to be completely scrapped and refocused on opera excerpts, granting most matrix numbers to opera singer Ferruccio Giannini ). A simple new more or less sequential numbering system was started in March 1899, in which every number had a leading zero (never used previously) and the letter suffix, when present, denoted
612-583: The category, e.g., "A" for marching band, "F" for banjo, "N" for vocal quartet. Berliner's foreign matrices employed entirely different strategies, and many to most of those have been documented by discographer Alan Kelly . In 2014, the EMI Archive Trust announced an online initiative that would collect information on Berliner records worldwide. They have what appears to be the largest concentration of Berliner records in one place, numbering close to 18,000 items and largely collected by Fred Gaisberg in
646-586: The considerably louder gramophone – cylinders had usually been heard through individual stethoscope -like listening tubes, rather than through a horn that yielded relatively feeble sound. A new standard cylinder speed of 160 rpm was soon established, reducing the maximum playing time to a little over two minutes and losing an advantage over Berliner's discs. As the popularity of the gramophone began to pick up, Berliner found himself having to deal with infringers on his patents. In 1898, Berliner shut down at least two firms that were leeching off his business models and, in
680-564: The dissolution of RCA in 1986, the buildings have been turned into a multi-use office/commercial development, in which the Musée des ondes Emile Berliner , is documenting the history of the man, his company and the building complex, occupies part of the space. The historic Studio Victor located there was until 2014 an active recording studio. In 2015 the La hacienda creativ used the studio for recordings until 2021. The range of material on Berliner records
714-651: The early years of the company. Another large concentration of Canadian Berliners are held by the National Library of Canada , which has set up the Virtual Gramophone on the web to provide access to them, though their focus is primarily on Canadian artists. There is a notable collection of Berliner records and gramophones housed at the Musée des ondes Emile Berliner, located in Montreal , QC, in one of
SECTION 20
#1732781119770748-563: The first case, products. In 1899, Berliner discovered that Frank Seaman was behind a machine called the Zonophone that seemed an exact replica of the Gramophone. Furious, Berliner cut off all supply to New York, which proved a fatal error. Seaman countersued for breach of contract, and in June 1900 the court granted an injunction against Berliner and United States Gramophone Company. Though he would attempt in several proceedings afterward to have
782-571: The first types of microphones . The patent was acquired by the Bell Telephone Company (see The Telephone Cases ), but contested, in a long legal battle, by Thomas Edison . On February 27, 1901, the United States Court of Appeals would declare Berliner's patent void and awarded Edison full rights to the invention. "Edison preceded Berliner in the transmission of speech," the court would write. "The use of carbon in
816-401: The injunction overturned, it was allowed to stand and it compelled Emile Berliner's exit from the gramophone business in the United States of America. Berliner transferred his patents to Eldridge Johnson, who then changed the name over the door to his own, though Berliner retained a share in the new company. In March 1901, Johnson registered the name Victor Talking Machine Company and launched
850-475: The most influential or historic records ever released, they certainly are highlights of a typical Berliner collection Emile Berliner Emile Berliner (May 20, 1851 – August 3, 1929) originally Emil Berliner , was a German-American inventor. He is best known for inventing the lateral-cut flat disc record (called a "gramophone record" in British and American English) used with a gramophone . He founded
884-580: The name of the United States Gramophone Company and began to manufacture machines and record 7-inch hard rubber discs in 1892 and in 1894 (though commercially available plates would only appear since 1894). Some celluloid discs were also made. In 1895, hard rubber was replaced by a shellac compound, which in various formulations remained the standard disc record material until the first vinyl records – initially made only for radio use and other special applications – were introduced in
918-426: The old RCA Victor factories. Some of the notable artists who recorded for Berliner include: Below is a small selection of the most notable or popular 7" records strung by the company, most times the first iteration of the songs played. ·Berliner 7W (" William Tell overture ", played by Sousa's band ) ·Berliner 140 (" Washington Post march ", played by Sousa's band) ·Berliner 830 ("Morning serenade", played by
952-503: The same year RCA bought out Victor – and Edgar Berliner resigned from Canadian RCA in 1930. Berliner Gram-o-phone's facilities in Montreal, a complex of buildings at 1001 rue Lenoir and 1050 rue Lacasse in the St-Henri district, became home to RCA Victor Canada over the next several decades, developing and producing such high-tech products as microwave radio relay systems, communication satellites, television broadcast equipment, etc. Since
986-489: The speed, which was not standardized and ranged from about 75 rpm to a more typical 70 rpm down to as slow as 60 rpm. During most of the 1890s, the competing small-diameter brown wax cylinder records were recorded at about 120 rpm and could play for as long as three minutes, although recordings fully that long were uncommon. At the end of the decade, cylinder record makers began a transition to higher speeds, mainly to produce louder-playing cylinders that could better compete with
1020-627: Was connected with the American Propeller Manufacturing Company , a manufacturer of aeronautical related mechanisms and products in Baltimore, Maryland. By 1910, Berliner was experimenting with the use of a vertically mounted tail rotor to counteract torque on his single-main-rotor design, a configuration that led to practical helicopters of the 1940s. The building used for these operations exists at 774 Girard Street NW, Washington, D.C., where its principal facade
1054-511: Was once touted as the oldest commercial disc in the world, though this has since been disproven. The Kämmer & Reinhardt venture did not last very long, though just how long is unclear. In the early 1890s, Berliner attempted to found his first American company, the American Gramophone Company, in New York City, but it fell apart before issuing a single machine or disc. Back in Washington, D.C., Berliner tried again under
Berliner Gramophone - Misplaced Pages Continue
1088-413: Was re-recorded by another artist. Subsequent re-recordings are usually given a letter suffix, usually "Z-W" for early releases. Helpfully, the recording or matrix processing date is usually inscribed in the label area, but as Berliner did not employ paper labels sometimes the information is difficult to read. Many times the matrix numbers were reused to fit new records into the crumbling block system, such as
1122-535: Was undertaken in Germany in 1889 with the manufacturer Kämmer & Reinhardt [ de ] , a maker of toys. The Kämmer & Reinhardt machine utilized 5" hard rubber discs, and some machines and discs were exported to England. An 1890 recording of Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star , likely made by Berliner himself, is the oldest disc in the BBC Library or in the Bibliothèque nationale de France and
1156-521: Was wider than that available from cylinder companies in the 1890s. As may be expected, Berliner was well-supplied with the typical band and song selections commonly found on cylinders, but he also branched out into piano music, ragtime, speeches, sermons, instrumental solos and some ethnographic material on a greater scale than his competitors. From the beginning, Berliner's European subsidiaries were deeply invested in opera and classical music, only indirectly exploited by American cylinder companies, at least in
#769230