Phono Needle Art 
            
          Art 
            and Connections with the Phonograph Needle 
         
          
         
          By Doug Boilesen 2020 
          The phonograph's reproduction of recorded 
            sound is heard when the 'rubber hits the road," i.e., when the 
            needle hits the grooves of the record. Early phonographs like Berliner's 
            Gramophone and its descendent Victor Talking Machine Company used 
            a sharp point, normally a steel needle, to follow the groove of a 
            record to create sound. Berliner's United States Gramophone Company 
            began to manufacture 7-inch hard rubber discs so that for his 1894 
            machines the needle literally hit the rubber of the record. 
             
             
			 
         
          
        Victor Soundbox 
          with steel needle 
          - Courtesy Antique 
          Phonograph Society  
		   
      
        	
		  
		    
		  
		  
         
            
          "Needles were made of various materials: 
            steel, chrome, fibers, thorn, cactus, sapphire, and diamond...As early 
            as 1906, there were nine types of needle available: three to play 
            quietly, three to play at medium volume, and three types for loud 
            playback." (1) 
          A needle tin could be purchased that 
            contained steel talking machine needles. The variety of designs, shapes 
            and companies could create its own gallery of phonograph needle art. 
            The following example is from the collection of Arnold 
            Schwartzman (3), author of Phono-Graphics, where many more 
            can be seen.  
             
         
          
        Assortment of needle tins 
          courtesy of Arnold Schwartzman (3) 
          
          
          
          
          
         
          My favorite phonograph needle 
            art, however, is where a bird or plant or other 'figure' is used as 
            the needle. For example, a bird positioned on a turntable with 
            its beak pointing into the groove of a record as a stylus is the most 
            common of those artistic adaptations. 
             
             
         
          
         Cover illustration for 
          Poetry book by Jake Adam York titled Abide. Photo courtesy of 
          Jeroen Diepenmaat ©2005 
          
         
          Fred Flintstone and Woody Woodpecker 
            used bird beaks for their record players as does EMEK in his 2003 
            poster "Phono Bird"; Hot Stuff "The Little Devil" 
            used his 'devil tail' for a stylus (see below examples). 
         
          
          
          
          
          
          
          
          
          
        Lilo and Stitch, 
          Disney, 2002 from trade magazine advertisement for Oscar promotion. 
          (PM-2112) 
          
          
          
          
          
          
        WATCH Clip  of Pluto's Blue Note, Walt Disney (1947) 
          
	
	
	    
		  CD Cover Art, The Grateful Dead, 1974. 
	  
          
	"Phono Bird" Courtesy of EMEK, 2009, Silk screen, 21" x 31".  
          
		  
          
        Coachella 
          "Flower"  
        Concert 
          poster for Coachella, Empire Polo Field, April 27-29, 2007 Courtesy 
          of EMEK.net 
          
          
         
           
             
              Artist: 
                Elena Maria Ospina Mejia 
             
           
          Elena Maria Ospina Mejia 
            is a painter, illustrator and cartoonist from Columbia. Image courtesy 
            of the European Cartoon gallery website. 
              
         
          
          
          
          
        Print by Pam Wishbow - 
          Fox's tail is the stylus for the record 
          
          
        Raven and Record Player, 
          Lantern Press Postcard 2024 
          
         
          Soldier's bayonet used as needle 
            to play message on the record 
         
          
         
          When I Hear That Phonograph 
            Play, M. 
            Witmark & Sons, New York 1918 - Soldier's 
            bayonet used as needle to play message on the record, James 
            Francis Driscoll collection 
            of American sheet music.  
         
          
          
         
          "You can't pull a Camel through 
            the Eye of a Needle" but that would "be easier than having 
            the WHOLE World's assemblage of choicest entertainers emanate from 
            the point of a needle." The Talking Machine World, July 
            15, 1915  
            
          Betty Boop's Voice Recorder  
         
          
          
          
         
          A Max Fleischer Studios short animated 
            cartoon titled “Betty Boop’s Crazy Inventions” was first theatrically 
            released in 1933. One of the "Crazy Inventions" exhibits 
            was a "Voice Recorder demonstrated by Betty Boop. This Voice 
            Recorder had a unique recording process with a mouse inside the box 
            and the mouse's tail acting as the record's needle.  
            
         
          
        To watch this scene from 
          "Betty Boop's Crazy Inventions" cartoon see the PhonoToons' 
          Betty Boop. 
          
         
           
             
                
              What are needles for? (The 
                answer found in a 1915 periodical) 
              Grandmother: “How useless 
                girls are today. I don’t believe you know what needles are for.” 
              Girl: “How absurd you are, 
                grandma. Of course I know what needles are for. They’re to make 
                the graphophone play.”  
              
                The Onlooker, Foley, Alabama, 
                  1915 
               
             
           
         
         
           
          
        Scotch Comic Series postcard 
          circa 1930's 
          
          
        Fidelitone Master Floating 
          Point Phonograph Needle Dealer's Display circa 1950 (PM-1974)  
         
          This display is another example of the 
            phonograph advertising showing the family entertained by the "Stage 
            of the World" in their own home. For more information about 
            Fidelitone Needles, see Made 
            in Chicago Museum, Permo Inc. / Fideltone est. 1929  
            
            
           
             
             
            For other phonograph connections with needles 
            see Phonographia's Sewing 
            Machines and the Phonograph. 
             
             
             
             
             
             
             
         
          
          
         
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