Visions of Artists in the Home

Imagining Performances via the Phonograph

 

By Doug Boilesen, 2020

Early phonograph advertisements had multiple ways to portray recording artists coming into the home.

Identifiable artists might be pictured inside a horn or emerging from the horn.

Later cabinet model machines, like the Victrola and the Grafonola, had artists coming out their doors and louvres.

Artists could also be pictured standing or performing literally on a record.

This gallery focuses on another way phonograph ads visualized artists as home entertainers. Floating above machines ethereal performers and opera stars appeared at your command. "The world's greatest living artists sing for you in your home. Anytime, anywhere..." (Victor ad, 1906)

 

Adelina Patti singing "Home Sweet Home," Munsey's Magazine, 1906 (PM-0977)

 

Magnola Phonograph ad, The Talking Machine World, February 1917

 

 

Magnola Phonograph ad, The Talking Machine World, May 1917

 

1905

 

"The voice by the fireside" - "You listen and forget it's the Victor" 1906 (PM-1365)

 

1906, Talk=o=phone, Pearson's magazine (PM-0964)

 

Victrola, 1914

 

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Columbia Grafonola 1919 - Visualizing with Songs Across the Sea (PM-0845)

 

Vocalion Phonograph, Cosmopolitan magazine, 1916

 

The Columbia Grafonola "The Treasure-Casket of Music" March 1916

 

Aeolian Vocalion Phonograph, The Talking Machine World, April 15, 1918

 

Aeolian Vocalion Phonograph, London magazine ad, March 1918

 

Columbia Records, National Geographic, 1919

 

"The veritable embodiment of the liberated spirit of music," MacLean's Magazine, 1921

 

Victrola Waiting to play for you - circa 1920

 

Thermiodyne, "The wonder-working Aladdin of Radio," The Talking Machine World, March 15, 1925

 

"Introduce your whole family to the world's greatest music." The Saturday Evening Post, 1954

 

"Spoken Word: Postwar American Phonograph Cultures," by Jacob Smith, University of California Press, ©2011

Note: This book cover was added for its image of the performers of the spoken word emerging from the record player from the 1940's to the 1970's in the advertising tradition of music artists and performers at the beginning of the twentieth century.

 

 

 

 

Phonographia