Added: 4 years ago
From: gmmix
Views: 31,343
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  • wow, I never seen a cylinder in action. I am impressed!

  • wow, where did you find this sylinder? great record!

    have this on a cd called early jazz, 1917 to 25 and some googling should bring it up, get that cd! it really is great, that's why i looked this up

  • I liked this song because of the tootin' it had. ido not know what a cylinder is, but im pretty sure it made the song more enjoyable

  • Jimmy Dorsey playing in lewis band in late 20s could stand his playing no more and hit Lewis over the head with his clarinet and stormed off stage.On this record l have never heard worse clarinet playing...have you?

  • I love this band! My jazz tastes keep getting earlier and earlier. These guys were some of the best!

  • Very good sound reproduction of this cylinder of this fringe jazz group assembled to capitalize on the popularity of the Original Dixieland Jazzband. Ted Lewis is in there squeeking and sqwaking on clarinet. He does play a few nice jazz like clarinet breaks though.

  • Earl Fuller was born March 8, 1885.

    He was married to Katherine Fuller, and his usual occupation was in the real estate business as a broker.

    Fuller died August 18, 1947.

  • I constantly marvel at the number of obscure and significant facts relative to old-time recordings--both classical and popular--that appear in posted comments. As nothing lasts forever, how tragic it will be when and if one day YouTube disappears. Thanks PAAL1994 for your input.

  • That's some really good tootin' there, but this Raderman fellow sounds mighty slippery to me :)

  • I know practically nothing about cylinders and am always wondering how they managed in making additional copies after recording: cylinder is not a flat disc. Did they record each item of a cylinder again and again...? That would not be economical...-

  • Before the Gold-Moulded cylinder process of 1902 that enabled countless numbers of recordings from a single master, they used to set up a bank of recording machines with a single recording horn. From that horn, tubes ran to each machine. They could make perhaps a dozen or more recordings at a time.

  • Before the Gold-Moulded cylinder of 1902, a single horn led to 10 or more recording machines. Performers made the same piece over and over. Sound was weak so earphone tube-sets were used to listen.

  • Gmmix, Wonderfully raucous! Jass at it's earliest. Thanks. I'll ask around about Earl Fuller. YF, J.

  • "Raucous" is the perfect adjective. Thanks...~!

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