Sentences with phrase «from phonograph»

Not exact matches

From the invention of the phonograph in 1877 to the boom in streaming services today, the music industry has had to constantly adapt to emerging...
Indeed, I found that most Russians put an inflated value on nearly every asset they have, from their apartments and rugs down to their collections of phonograph records and family heirlooms.
The style from the front definitely looks like an old school phonograph with the deep wood color and the rustic knobs and switches, but it plays even better.
The rover is still far from a planned mission, but it would be able to collect weeks» worth of climate and seismic data from Venus» surface, all recorded on phonograph - style records that periodically would be lifted by balloon to an overhead drone.
5 Kevlar, superglue, cellophane, Post-it notes, photographs, and the phonograph: They all emerged from laboratory blunders.
Coleman charts the history of recorded music from Edison's phonograph — played by hand - cranking a needle through grooves on a cylinder — to the digital CDs and iPods of today.
More than 130 years after Thomas Edison shouted the song to his tinfoil phonograph, making the first human voice recording, researchers from MIT, Microsoft and Adobe recorded the rhyme using the world's first «visual microphone» — an empty bag of potato chips.
Suzy drags along her little brother's portable phonograph, two heavy suitcases filled with books and cat food, spies on everyone and everything with a pair of binoculars hanging from her neck and invites Sam to feel her breasts after skinny dipping.
The tale ends with a description of some of his most marvelous inventions — the incandescent lightbulb; the phonograph; the kinetoscope, from which movies were to come — and gives a feel for Edison's genius and persistence.
The game has various collectibles ranging from random items and photos, to documents and phonograph cylinders, yet almost all of them are in plain sight or on a second path that's extremely obvious.
Cage played piano; Cunningham danced; and Rauschenberg, whose White Paintings were hung from the auditorium ceiling, played phonograph records.
Drawn from the MCA's extensive holdings of artist's correspondence, photographic documentation, catalogues, models, and exhibition materials, the work in Record Times ranges from the artists» multiple created for the MCA's first exhibition, Pictures to be Read / Poetry to be Seen (1967); to the Art by Telephone (1969) phonograph, which served as both the exhibition and catalogue for the exhibition; to diagrams, maquettes, and out - of - print exhibition catalogues.
In the 1952 «event», the Black Mountain lecturer MC Richards and the poet Charles Olsen read poetry from ladders; Rauschenberg's «White Paintings» hung overhead while he played Edith Piaf records on an old phonograph; David Tudor played the piano; Merce Cunningham danced in and around the audience (chased by a barking dog); and Cage sat on a step - ladder for two hours - sometimes reading a lecture on the relation of music to Zen Buddhism, sometimes listening silently.
Cage lectured throughout; David Tudor played the piano, though what he performed is uncertain; Charles Olson and M.C. Richards read poetry from a ladder; Robert Rauschenberg's «White Paintings» were hung from the ceiling and he played records on an old wind - up phonograph; film and slides were projected on opposing walls and possibly on Rauschenberg's paintings; and Merce Cunningham danced, at one point followed by a dog.
From the invention of the phonograph (or wax cylinder), to the vinyl LP, to the 8 - track cassette tape, to compact discs and digital files played on iPods that got smaller and smaller (and eventually, too, became unnecessary), music as an audio format evolved to satisfy demands of convenience and access.
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