James 
                  Boilesen
                
                Memories 
                  of the Phonograph
                 
                By James Boilesen
                I grew up in a home that had some antique 
                  phonographs in our basement. My brother Doug's collection included 
                  several Edison phonographs that played cylinder records and 
                  a few cabinet model machines including his very first machine, 
                  a Victrola XVI. 
                Doug kept a few of his favorite records 
                  inside the cabinet of his Victrola. Of course as 
                  a toddler I didn't know what a Victrola was except that it had 
                  doors. And since doors to a three-year-old are something to 
                  be opened I did one fateful day open those doors and apparently 
                  found the cylinder cardboard boxes that were obviously meant 
                  for me to play with.
                
                 
                That was my first contact with Edison cylinder 
                  records, a day not good for six of those wax records.
                I was too young to remember any details 
                  but I do know that Doug replaced the broken records, including 
                  Edison Record Number 8619 "Rueben 
                  Haskins' ride on a cyclone auto" by Len Spencer, and 
                  that to this day hearing 
                  that 'cyclone auto' record is a reminder for Doug of my 
                  early interest in phonograph records.
                So I had an early introduction to phonographs 
                  and records.
                
                 
                Since music and turntables and sound systems 
                  would later become an important part of my life it's clear that 
                  my first encounter with recorded sound didn't negatively impact 
                  that interest. A decade later that destruction of Edison cylinders 
                  also wasn't enough to ban me from becoming a charter member 
                  of Friends of the Phonograph.
                 
                 
                  
                   
                
                So here are a few phonograph memories that 
                  probably have alittle more relevance to the development of my 
                  passion for record players and recorded music.
                The first record player I remember is our 
                  family's Fisher Console Stereo. It was one of those large pieces 
                  of furniture that dominated many suburban home living rooms 
                  in the 1970's. 
                 
                   
                  
                   
                  I would listen to some phonograph 
                    records on the "Fisher" and can particularly remember 
                    the excitement of hearing the growing crescendo when playing 
                    "In Hall of the Mountain King" (Grieg's, not Electric 
                    Light Orchestra's) which also was often accompanied by me 
                    and a friend dancing wildly at its conclusion.
                  
                   
                  Most of my music listening, 
                    however, was on my Panasonic 8-track component system. The 
                    Beatle's White Album, Rubber Soul, Revolver, 
                    The Byrd's Greatest Hits ...these were a few of my 
                    go-to cassette's that introduced me to a life-long passion 
                    for recorded sound. No turntable... just two speakers, AM, 
                    FM, and the 8-track slot.
                  