Cylinder phonographs (phonographs)
- Ficha
- SKOS
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<skos:Concept rdf:about="http://vocab.getty.edu/aat/300265798">
<skos:prefLabel xml:lang="en">cylinder phonographs (phonographs)</skos:prefLabel>
<skos:prefLabel xml:lang="nl">fonografen</skos:prefLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">cylinder phonograph (phonograph)</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">wax cylinder phonograph</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">wax-cylinder phonograph</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">phonograph, cylinder (phonographs)</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">wax cylinder phonographs</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">wax-cylinder phonographs</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">phonographs, cylinder (phonographs)</skos:altLabel>
- <skos:broader rdf:resource="http://museovirtualfelixcanada.digibis.com//concepts/59570" />
<skos:note xml:lang="en">Early instruments of the type invented by Thomas Alva Edison in 1877, that record and play back sounds using rotating grooved cylinders covered with tinfoil, later made of wax. Although Edison recognized that grooves could also be made on a rotating disc, he concentrated his efforts on cylinders, since the groove on the outside of a rotating cylinder provided a constant velocity to the stylus in the groove. In 1886 vertically modulated engraved recordings using wax coated cylinders were patented by Chichester Bell and Charles Sumner Tainter. Rotating discs were employed in "gramophones," invented in the 1890s.</skos:note>
<skos:note xml:lang="nl">Apparaten die geluid reproduceren door middel van een trillende naald die de groef volgt van een draaiende rol, gewoonlijk van was.</skos:note>
<skos:notation>300265798</skos:notation>
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