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When we walk into a retro diner or a
Jonny Rockets joint, we know that the décor won't be complete
without the jukebox. Even as adults hanging out in bars, we still
search for that good old box - just for the joy of inserting your
coins and listening to some good music. It's hard to image how such a
retro, clunky, jumbo box of an entertainment system now fit into our
pockets so easily. We would not have our Walkmans, mp3 players and
nano size iPods if it wasn't for the invention of the jukebox.
The
ancestors of the jukebox were music boxes and player pianos that
played music when a coin was inserted. Their limitation was their
size and the fact that they were no more than instruments that played
tunes. A vague form of the entertainment system emerged circa 1888,
which were phonograph cylinders. They were then known as 'records'.
The cylinder had to be played on a mechanical phonograph. The
phonograph can be attached with rubber ear tubes (ancestor of
headphones) or an amplifying horn so a party can dance to the
music.
In the age of mass production and technological
advances - the cylinder phonographs gave way to disc records. The
discs were easier and cheaper to store in bulk since they could be
stacked or put in paper sleeves in rows like books. Discs wobbled
less - which meant there were almost no pitch fluctuations -
resulting in a higher sound quality.
In 1908 Columbia Records
produced discs with recordings on both sides. This allowed consumers
to get two recordings at the price of one cylinder. Columbia Records
slowly shifted to producing just the disc phonograph records.
Although Thomas Edison's company continued to produce the lesser
audio quality cylinder phonographs, the production came to a complete
halt in 1929.
The popularity of the gramophone records paved
the way for the jukebox. The idea of a "nickel-in-the-Slot
machine" was up and running with the cylinder phonograph
since 1889 in San Francisco. It earned over $1000. Thanks to its
inventors Louis Glass and William S. Arnold (who placed the coin
mechanisms in Edison's cylinder phonograph's oak cabinet and patented
the design) recordings became popular. With the innovation of the
disc recordings and the idea of paying for listening music another
inventor John Gabel replaced the cylinders with 78 rpm disc
recordings. His jukebox offered several selections of records to be
played. Gabel's so called Automated Entertainer dominated the market
until the 1920s.
The boom in popularity of the jukebox finally
started with the development of the electric amplifier in 1927.
Combined with the Prohibition Era boredom, the juke provided popular
but cheap form of entertainment. The sale jukebox reached at the
height of $75 million by 1929. The surge of jukebox sale was short
lived however because of the depression sales went as low as $5
million by 1933. The hard times did not kill the
popularity of the jukebox. A number of store owners still purchased
it and people still listened to jukeboxes. By 1939 sales went back up
to $25 and by 1940 there were 400,000 jukeboxes in use in the US. The
surge of popularity did not slow down until the mid 1960s.
Because
of the popularity of the jukebox in the 40s and 50s it is forever
associated as a classic rock icon. There are a ton of movies that
we've seen where the jukebox is the brief, lone silent character,
yet, the era the films portrayed would not be complete without the
jukebox. Although engulfed by chain fast food restaurants and
cassette players, jukebox still manages to be the silent player in
all our lives. In the 1980s it reemerged in the secondary market as
an antique and with compact discs inside in the primary market.
But
we owe the jukebox's popularity in the 40s and 50s - the
Wurlitzers, Rock-Olas, and See burgs. If it wasn't for them, music
and recordings might not be popular and personal entertainment like
Walkmans and mp3 players might not have ever been invented. Thanks to
jukeboxes, which gave entertainment back in those days, we have our
own version of entertainment now - granted in nano form. Article Source: http://www.ArticleBlast.com |