I love wunderkinds and their stories, n' enjoyed yours,  Andrew!  It 
reminded me of a mechanically talented HS boy I knew  a few years ago who asked 
everybody he ran into if they had any broken  lawnmowers or chainsaws.  He'd 
usually get 'em for free, and then repaired  and sold them.  Needless-to-say, 
he wasn't a Goth, or a Bagger, a  Stoner or a Preppie, but he wore faded 
overalls and a tam cap!   Ha!  
 
Does anyone think our passion for antiques hearkens to a previous life, or  
is it a kind of genetic affinity, or what?  My mom disdained  anything  
old.  When I was a boy, she had barely pointed out a cabinet we had in  the 
basement that came over from Italy with great-grand parents in the  1840s, and 
then coming home from school I saw it on the curb for the trash  collectors! 
 I reacted with horror, and squirreled it away to my clubhouse in the  
backyard.  Though Mom called everything that played a record a  Victrola, do I 
need to say the actual Victrola was long gone by the time I was  old enough 
to save it? 
 
: )
 
Edward
 
 
 
 
In a message dated 8/2/2012 8:10:07 A.M. Pacific Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

Glad you  enjoyed it.

Taking the time to type out these remembrances brought out  some old 
memories.  The only thing of real importance that I omitted, was  that the 
waitresses at Flynns would now and then offer me a tall, icy Coca  Cola for 
free 
while I worked on reviving the machines; a tremendous and always  unexpected 
perk.  I got to work on phonographs AND got free soft  drinks.

So, to the list of those who've been generous and supportive  must be added 
the waitresses of Flynn's Dixie Ribs of the mid  1970s.

Andrew

On Aug 2, 2012, at 3:50 AM, john robles  wrote:

> Great story, Andrew! I am loving reading all these  histories!
> John Robles
> 
> 
> 
> 
>  ________________________________
> From: Andrew Baron  <[email protected]>
> To: Antique Phonograph List  <[email protected]>
> Sent: Wed, August 1, 2012 9:09:01  PM
> Subject: Re: [Phono-L] How it Started
> 
> Great to  hear everyone's stories.  Here's mine.
> 
> I've had an  affinity for history, machines and the phonograph for as 
long as I 
>  can remember, and recall creating a paper model of an upright phonograph 
 before 
> I ever had a real one.  I also remember standing in utter  awe, in the 
Edison 
> Winter Home and Museum in Fort Myers (now the  Edison-Ford estates), 
gazing at 
> the wall-to-wall, floor-to-ceiling  display of cylinder players sprouting 
morning 
> glory horns in such  profusion that it looked like a massive, enchanted 
garden.  
> I  have to admit reaching out to touch some of the uprights and consoles 
there,  
> lined up behind velvet barrier rails, just so I could feel the  history.
> 
> In 1974 when I was 12 my family moved, and within  bike-riding distance 
of our 
> new home was a restaurant called "Flynn's  Dixie Ribs".  For ambience, it 
was 
> decorated with old relics,  including Singer sewing machines and several 
mostly 
> 1920s  phonographs.  I don't recall if they were for sale, but my first 
>  phonograph, a "Berg-Artone" portable, was procured from there.  The  
management 
> was very kind, letting me tinker with the machines in the  off hours, and 
it was 
> there that I got my first hands-on phonograph  mechanism education.  I 
recall 
> that I paid for the Berg-Artone  with a fine Morgan silver dollar and 
$5.00 
> hard-earned from mowing  ten lawns in the Florida heat.  That portable 
had a 
> broken  mainspring, a punctured, wrinkled aluminum diaphragm and a 
dangling 
>  needle chuck.  You might say that the management got the better end of  
the deal, 
> but for me it was a major coup to get the solid makings of  a viable 
machine.  I 
> got two records with it; a tired copy of  Jimmie Lunceford's "R
> hythm is Our Business" on Decca, and "Till We  Meet Again" (paired with 
"Have a 
> Smile") on Victor.  
>  
> 
> First I sorted out the reproducer and for a time I just spun  the records 
by 
> finger-on-the-label, enthralled at how so much sound  could come out of a 
purely 
> mechanical device.  I was already  into electronics and had built some 
kits and a 
> little transistorized  amplifier, so discovering that acoustic 
reproduction could 
> yield such  bold volume and detail was a revelation.  I also learned that 
the  
> motor's centrifugal governor worked quite well to regulate my  
hand-driving of 
> the platter, and that in its own right was an  education.  Eventually I 
got 
> brave, liberated the mainspring and  repaired it, and from that point 
forward the 
> Berg-Artone was capable  of playing records without human intervention, 
once set 
> in  motion.  Well-meaning adults would ask how I knew what to do, which I 
 always 
> thought was some kind of trick question.  It never  occurred to me that 
they 
> wouldn't necessarily know a lot more than I  did about that sort of thing.
> 
> For needles, I used whatever  was in the little spring-lidded needle cup 
and 
> found that the pointy  ones sounded better than the blunted ones, and 
resulted in 
> less black  powdery buildup on the needle tip.  After that, I scrounged 
through  
> the needle bins of the other phonographs in the restaurant, weeding  out 
the 
> obviously worn ones.  In search of more, an experiment  of cutting the 
heads off 
> of little brads from the local hardware  store yielded poor results, but 
added to 
> my evolving education.   I remember the great moment when at a hi-fi 
store, I 
> found several  new blister packs of 25 needles for 25 cents each, and 
bought them 
>  all.  They must have been old stock then, as none further appeared to  
replace 
> them.
> 
> The big event when I was 13, was the  acquisition from the same 
restaurant, of a 
> "Cecilian Melophonic"  upright model; something of an Orthophonic 
wannabe, but in 
> fine  condition with attractive burl overlay accents.  I derived hours of 
 
> pleasure listening to that machine and its comparatively full-bodied  
tone.  The 
> record I played most often on it was a cornet solo of  Carry Me Back to 
Ole 
> Virginny on a blue-label Columbia.  It had  a mournful quality, and a 
perceived 
> richness that seemed to also  carry me back in time.  The performer's 
name 
> remains embedded in  my memory; Nellie Hoone Wetmore.  Guess I was an odd 
kid.
>  
> At 14 I worked for a time at a low-level antique store cleaning up  
things in the 
> back, and arranged to trade my time for a tantalizing  Edison Home with a 
> brightly repainted red MG horn.  With heavy  heart I terminated my 
employment 
> when they sold this treasure to a  cash buyer.  Later that year came the 
next 
> milestone, when I  managed to buy my first Edison phonograph, a near-mint 
BC-34 
> console,  from a phonograph enthusiast named Mark Stark whom I met at the 
Miami 
>  Tropicaire Flea Market.  Two weeks prior, Mark had sold me some Diamond  
Disc 
> records, but I quickly realized I was doing them harm,  attempting play 
with a 
> steel needle.  Mark had the BC-34 across  the back end of his pickup 
truck when I 
> bought the records.  The  following week I went back, and running through 
the 
> aisles soon found  Mark and his pickup truck, but no BC-34.  He told me 
that he 
>  just hadn't brought it out that day.  I don't recall what I did to raise 
 the 
> $135.00 for that machine, but it must have taxed every 
>  
> horse-trading avenue I had at the time.  I used to collect  coins, and 
it's 
> likely I turned in some of the collection.  The  big bonus for me, 
however, was 
> going to Mark's house to pick up the  machine (with much arm-twisting of 
my 
> new-driver older  brother).  There, my host provided us with a guided 
tour of his 
>  phonograph collection.  My eyes must have been big as saucers, and my  
ears 
> standing at attention to pick up every sound.
> 
>  My first cylinder phonograph finally came to hand about two years later 
around  
> 1978, courtesy of Les Goldberg at his store "Everything Audio".   This 
shop was 
> clear across the city, a harrowing drive on three  expressways to the 
unknown 
> treasures that lay at the other end of the  journey.  Everything Audio 
inspired 
> me endlessly with the  restored radios, phonographs and occasional 
Jukebox in its 
> little  front showroom, while Les toiled in back, dealing with the 
day-to-day 
>  life of TV and tape player repair, and unappreciative  
consumer-customers.  In 
> his showroom, however, he had seemingly  endless piles of 78's standing 
> precariously tall and at an affordable  fifty cents each, and I would 
spend hours 
> sifting through these,  hobbling out in the early afternoon with bent 
knees and 
> numb legs, to  get sustenance from the burger joint next door.  The rest 
of the 
>  afternoon would be spent sorting the records into the "can live 
without",  
> "maybe" and "have to have" piles.  A glance inside my wa
>  llet would often dictate the final cull, though.  One day Les gave me 
the  
> unexpected, golden opportunity to take my pick of one of two  
non-functional 
> Edison Home phonographs, in exchange for returning one  to him working 
and 
> salable. 
> 
> 
> These were my  phonograph beginnings.  I've loved the mechanics of it, 
getting to  
> know the artists and records, reading the histories and enjoying the  
simple, 
> aesthetic pleasure of seeing the machines.  As time goes  on and I 
mature, I find 
> myself feeling less possessive about the  machines, and spending far more 
time 
> thinking about the generosity  and support of the people I've met over 
the years 
> through this  passion, one of whom continues to be a prized mentor, and 
others 
>  whose wisdom I've been privileged to dip into with a dedicated question 
now  and 
> then about a particular machine.
> 
> My phonograph  collection these days numbers a dozen machines, which in 
the rush 
> of  life tend to fade into the woodwork when left alone, but shine forth 
when  
> interest from other, and sometimes younger people gives them an added  
reason to 
> be played.  In roughly chronological order they  are:
> 
> An early Edison banner Triumph improved for performance  with a 2/4 
setup, a 
> prized Medved-rebuilt O-reproducer and Gfell  Music Master horn; a Victor 
Type E 
> front mount (Monarch Junior), a  Zonophone Grand Opera, Edisons: maroon 
Gem and 
> Home model D's, early  A-250, a Victrola XVIII, a Brunswick 17 with the 
> dual-diaphragm  Ultona, an Amberola 50, a Kameraphone & Thorens Excelda, 
and an 
>  electric-motored Victor Orthophonic Credenza.
> 
> Andrew  Baron
> Santa Fe
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