From Ballotpedia <[email protected]>
Subject 103 years ago today the first jazz records were recorded
Date February 26, 2020 1:03 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
February 26, 2020: On February 26, 2020—103 years ago today—the Original Dixieland Jass Band entered the studio to record a pair of tunes for the Victor Talking Machine Company. Just a couple of weeks later, the "Dixie Jazz Band One Step" and "Livery Stable Blues" were released as flip sides on a 78 RPM record.[1]

[link removed]

The five-piece band “had just taken up residence at Reisenweber’s Café, a swanky eatery on 8th Avenue, near Columbus Circle—coincidentally, now the home of Jazz at Lincoln Center” in New York, New York

[link removed]

.[2]

[link removed]

Later that year, they changed the spelling in the name from “Jass” to “Jazz.” You can hear Livery Stable Blues on YouTube.

While the band is little remembered, the Camden, New Jersey

[link removed]

-based Victor Talking Machine Company would go on to have a huge impact on the recording industry. HistoricCamdenCounty.com states that in 1896, "29-year-old machinist Eldridge Johnson invented the spring mechanism that made recorded music a commercially viable possibility. By 1900 he was manufacturing recorded music on the flat disks we would come to know as ‘records.’”[3]

[link removed]

The company quickly became an industry leader but faced challenges when another new technology emerged: radio. Some thought with music on the radio there would be no need for people to buy records. In 1929, Johnson sold the company to the radio industry giant RCA (Radio Corporation of America). One key innovation resulting from the merger was that RCA began marketing radios and phonographs in the same unit. You could then hear a song on the radio, buy the record, and play it when you wanted.[4]

[link removed]

The new firm eventually created the RCA Victor record label.[4]

[link removed]

Today, you can buy original Victor Talking Machine Company phonographs on e-Bay.[5]

[link removed]

Click here to view the Number of the Day online→

[link removed]

Each weekday, Scott Rasmussen’s Number of the Day

[link removed]

explores interesting and newsworthy topics at the intersection of culture, politics, and technology. Columns published on Ballotpedia reflect the views of the author.

To see other recent numbers, check out the archive

[link removed]

.

Was this email forwarded to you? Click here to subscribe to Scott Rasmussen’s Number of the Day.

[link removed]

Scott Rasmussen is an editor-at-large for Ballotpedia, the Encyclopedia of American Politics. He is a senior fellow for the study of self-governance at the King’s College in New York. His most recent book, Politics Has Failed: America Will Not

[link removed]

,

[link removed]

was published by the Sutherland Institute in August 2018.

Decide which emails you want from Ballotpedia.

Unsubscribe

[link removed]

or update your subscription preferences

[link removed]

Ballotpedia

The Encyclopedia of American Politics

8383 Greenway Blvd., Suite 600

[link removed]

Middleton, WI 53562

[link removed]

[link removed]


[link removed]
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis

  • Sender: Ballotpedia
  • Political Party: n/a
  • Country: United States
  • State/Locality: n/a
  • Office: n/a
  • Email Providers:
    • Pardot
    • Litmus