![]() ![]() 6" bw/ Frankie allace "I'm Riding The Blinds On A Train Heading West"- (both sides w/ Novelty Accompaniment) EX $5īANNER- 0615- Carson Robinson Trio "Red River Valley" bw/ "Down On The Old Plantation"- VG+ $6īANNER- 0773- Frankie Wallace & His Guitar "Hobo Bill's Last Ride" bw/ CARSON ROBISON TRIO "My Pretty Quadroon"- VG $6īANNER- 1611- Vernon Dalhart "Blue Ridge Mountain Blues" bw/ "He Sure Can Play A Harmonica" VG $14īANNER- 32338- Louis Katzman & His Orchestra "One Of Us Was Wrong" (Chick Bullock vocal) bw/ "By The Sycamore Tree" (Scrappy Lambert vocal) EX $6īELL- 491- Honey Duke & His Uke "Crazy Words, Crazy Tune" bw/ "Ain't She Sweet"- (1927 ex- Pennsylvania Syncopators) VG+ $12īLUEBIRD- B-5688- Mill Blue Rhythm Band- "The Stuff Is Here" bw/ "The Growl" VG+ $12īLUEBIRD- B-5713- Jimmie Lunceford & His Orchestra "White Heat" bw/ "Jazznocracy" VG $9īLUEBIRD- B-6146- The California Ramblers "Now You've Got Me Doing It" bw/ "Broadway Rhythm" (Vocal refrains by Eddiy Lloyd, November 19, 1935) NM $5īLUEBIRD- B-6204- Benny Moten's Kansas City Orchestra "Moten Stomp" bw/ Clifford Haye's Louisville Stompers "Blue Guitar Stomp" VG+ $12īLUEBIRD- B-7621- Wingy Mannone & His Orcherstra "The Flat Foot Floogie" bw/ "Martha" - EX $6īLUEBIRD- B-10195- Artie Shaw & His Orchestra "You Grow Sweeter As The Years Go By" bw/ "If You Ever Change Your Mind"- (both sides w/ Helen Forrest vocals, 1939) VG $12īLUEBIRD- B-10404- Glenn Miller & His Orchestra "Blue Moonlight" bw/ "My Prayer"- (both sides w/ Ray Eberle vocals) VG $4īLUEBIRD- B-10530- Charles Barnet & His Orchestra "Ogoun Badagris (Voodoo War God)" bw/ "The Right Idea" VG+ $12īLUEBIRD- B-10553- Glenn Miller & His Orchestra "In An Old Dutch Garden" bw/ "Starlit Hour"- (both sides w/ Ray Eberle vocals) VG+ $5īLUEBIRD- B-10674- Earl Hines & His Orchestra "Boogie Woogie On St. Ambiguous A-sides are determined by the matrix number.ĪBBOTT- 140- Mitchell Torok "Caribbean" bw/ "Weep Away"- (both sides w/ The Louisiana Hayride Band) VG $1ĪBBOTT- 3001- The DeCastro Sisters "It's Love" bw/ "Teach Me Tonight"- (both sides w/ Skip Martin Orchestra) VG $2ĪBC-PARAMOUNT- 9765- George Hamilton IV "A Rose & A Baby Ruth" bw/ "If You Don't Know"- VG $4ĪLADDIN- 3398- Thurston Harris "Little Bitty Pretty One" bw/ "I Hope You Won't Hold It Against Me"- (1957 R&B) VG $27ĪPOLLO- 462- The Opals "Oh But She Did" bw/ "My Heart's Desire"- (1954 R&B formerly known as The Crystals) EX+ $85ĪRA- 136- Phil Harris & Orchestra "One-zy Two-zy" bw/ "Some Little Bug"- VG $6ĪRA- 138- Judy Canova & The Sportsmen "You Stole My Heart" bw/ "It Couldn't Be True"- (both sides w/ Lou Bring & Orchestra) VG- $1ĪTCO- 6116- The Coasters "Zing! Went The Strings Of My Heart" bw/ "Yakety Yak"- (1958) VG $22ĪTLANTIC- 963 The Clovers "Middle Of The Night" bw/ "One Mint Julip"- VG $22ĪTLANTIC- 1035- The Clovers "Got My Eyes On You (See Everything You Do)" bw/ "Your Cash Ain't Nothin' But Trash"- VG $28ĪTOMIC- 230- Slim Gaillard Quartette "Drei Six Cents" bw/ "Minuet In Vout" (of 'Slim & Slam' fame) EX+ $28īANNER- 0529- Jack Kaufman "Bum Song No. ![]() This list is sorted by label w/ lowest number first. When playing 78s on a modern phonograph, a sapphire needle is recommended. It applied to all record speeds (33, 45, 78). The equalization curve was standardized throughout the industry in the early 50’s making true high-fidelity possible. Steel needles should be used only with shellac records, with the proper gauge of needle depending on the time the record was made. You shouldn't play any vinyl 78s from the 50s with a steel needle. 78s made between 1940-1950, when light weight electric pick-ups were becoming more common, weren't deigned for steel needles and can wear down extremely fast after only a few plays. If you play them on an acoustic machine, they will wear down quicker & can overpower the reproducer. 78s made after 1930 were recorded louder. The steel needle should be changed after each play or two. Victor records w/ the 'bat-wing' label sound best on a Victor machine with a mica diaphragm. Acoustically recorded records (before about 1927) should be played on a wind-up machine. As a rule of thumb, 78s should be from the same time or older than the machine it is played on. The grooves on these records are about 4 times larger than LPs, hence grading is more forgiving than for regular vinyl LPs. They are typically made of a shellac compound, and are thick, heavy and fragile. ![]() The first disc format was the 10-inch 78 rpm record, invented around 1900. ![]()
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