
A Victor Talking Machine
The Victor Talking Machine
Company (1901–1929) was an American
corporation, the leading American producer of
phonographs and phonograph records and one of the leading
phonograph companies in the world at the time. It was headquartered
in Camden, New
Jersey
.
The company was founded by
Eldridge
R. Johnson, who had
previously made phonographs to play
Emile
Berliner's
Berliner
Gramophone records. Some sources also claim Berliner as a
co-founder; others say Berliner was never connected with the Victor
company, though that may have been part of a ruse by Johnson to
defeat the
Zonophone lawsuits that had put
Berliner Gramophone out of business (in the U.S., but not in
Canada, the UK, or Germany) and threatened Johnson's phonograph
business. (Zonophone had used patent ruses to defeat Berliner, the
inventor of disc records whose technology Zonophone had copied.) In
any event, Victor ultimately acquired the remaining assets of
Berliner Gramophone; it also acquired Zonophone after defeating it
in court.
Name and logo
is some controversy as to how the name came about. Fred Barnum
gives various possible origins of the "Victor" name; in "'His
Master's Voice' In America", he writes, "One story claims that
Johnson considered his first improved Gramophone to be both a
scientific and business 'victory.' A second account is that Johnson
emerged as the 'Victor' from the lengthy and costly patent
litigations involving Berliner and
Frank
Seaman's
Zonophone. A third story is
that Johnson's partner, Leon Forrest Douglass, derived the word
from his wife's name 'Victoria.' Finally, a fourth story is that
Johnson took the name from the popular 'Victor' bicycle, which he
had admired for its superior engineering. Of these four accounts
the first two are the most generally accepted."
Victor had the rights in the United States and
Latin America to use the famous trademark of
the fox terrier
Nipper listening to a
Berliner Gramophone. (
See also His Master's Voice.) The original
painting was by Francis Barraud in 1893, as a memorial to his
deceased brother, a London photographer, who willed him his estate
including his DC-powered Edison-Bell cylinder Phonograph with a
case of cylinders—some home-recorded—and his dog Nipper. Barraud
noticed that whenever he played a cylinder recorded by his brother,
the little dog would run to the horn, cock his ear and listen
intently. Barraud's original depicts Nipper staring intently into
the horn of an Edison-Bell while both sit on polished wooden
surface. There is some controversy amongst historians as to whether
this surface is the top of a table or the lid of the deceased
master's coffin. This dispute originated long after Barraud's death
and he made no comment during his life as to what the polished
wooden surface is supposed to depict, if it depicts anything other
than an artistic device for fixing Nipper and the Phonograph in
space.
After several years the painting was still unsold. Since the horn
on the Edison-Bell in the painting was black, a friend of Barraud's
suggested that he might paint one of the bright brass-belled horns
on display in the window at the new Berliner Gramophone shop on
Maiden Lane. The London branch was
managed by an American, William Barry Owen. Barraud paid a visit to
the branch with a photograph of the painting and asked to borrow a
horn. Owen gave Barraud a Berliner Gramophone and asked that he
paint it into the picture and then he would purchase the painting.
The original painting shows the contours of the Edison-Bell
Phonograph beneath the paint of the Gramophone when viewed in the
correct light.
The "His Master's Voice" logo as rendered in immense circular
leaded-glass panels remains in the 1915 factory building tower, now
converted to apartments.
Acoustical recording era
From the start Victor pioneered manufacturing processes and
eventually gained notoriety by using artists. In 1901 Victor made a
three-track puzzle record (single-sided A-821) and in 1903, a
three-step mother-stamper process to produce more stampers and
records than previously possible. After increasing the quality of
disc records and phonographs, Johnson began an ambitious project to
have the most prestigious singers and musicians of the day record
for Victor Records, with exclusive agreements where possible. Often
these artists demanded fees which the company could not hope to
make up from sale of their records. Johnson shrewdly knew that he
would get his money's worth in the long run in promotion of the
Victor brand name. These new "celebrity" recordings bore red
labels, and were marketed as
"Red
Seal" records. For many years these recordings were
single-sided; only in 1923 did Victor begin making double-sided
"Red Seal" records. Many advertisements were printed mentioning by
name the greatest names of music in the era, with the statement
that they recorded only for Victor Records. As Johnson intended,
much of the public assumed from this that Victor Records must be
superior to cylinder records.
The Victor recordings by
Enrico Caruso
between 1904–1920 were particularly successful, with those recorded
until mid-1916 usually conducted by
Walter B. Rogers and the remainder conducted by
Josef Pasternack and
Rosario Bourdon. They were often used by
retailers to demonstrate Victor phonographs; Caruso's rich powerful
low tenor voice highlighted the best range of audio fidelity of the
early audio technology while being minimally affected by its
defects. Even people who otherwise never listened to
opera often owned a record or two of the great voice
of Caruso. Caruso and Victor Records did much to boost each other's
commercial popularity. He made his final recordings in September
1920, only three months before his final appearances at the
Metropolitan Opera. Some of these
recordings were
remastered by RCA Victor to
the 45-rpm format and re-released in the early 1950s as companions
to the same selections by
Mario Lanza in
the "Red Seal" series. Interestingly, however, the labels for the
Caruso versions, although designated "Red Seal," were printed on a
lighter (gold) background to distinguish them from the Lanza
records. Many of both were also pressed on translucent red
vinyl.
Victor recorded numerous classical musicians, including
Jascha Heifetz,
Fritz Kreisler,
Victor Herbert, and
Sergei Rachmaninoff in a series of
recordings at its Camden, New Jersey studios. Rachmaninoff, in
particular, became one of the first composer-performers to record
extensively; he first made several recordings for
Thomas Edison in 1919, then became an
exclusive Victor artist from 1920 to 1942.
Orchestras were at a disadvantage in acoustical recordings, due to
the limited frequency range of the recording equipment. Musicians
had to gather as closely as possible around the recording horn.
Percussion instruments, in particular, were used sparingly since
many of them could not be heard on the recordings. However, Victor
made numerous recordings with bandmaster
Arthur Pryor conducting his own "Pryor's
Orchestra" in 1904-06, and Victor staff conductor Walter B. Rogers
directing Victor's own "house" orchestras, the Victor Orchestra
(for popular works) beginning in 1904 and the Victor Concert
Orchestra (for more "classical" literature) beginning in 1907. (A
very few 1903-04 14-inch issues are credited to the "Victor
Symphony Orchestra"; these may have been conducted by either Pryor
or Rogers.) The concert orchestra of
Victor Herbert made several recordings for
the company in 1903; these early discs may not have been conducted
by Herbert himself, but Victor signed Herbert and his orchestra to
a long-term contract in 1911, engaging them to record symphonic and
theatre music under Herbert's direction (most of the labels credit
"Victor Herbert's Orchestra/Personally directed by Victor
Herbert"). Victor also imported early orchestral recordings made by
its European affiliates, notably performances by the
La Scala Orchestra under
Carlo Sabajno and the
New Symphony Orchestra of
London under
Landon Ronald. Victor
expanded its American orchestral recording program by making
recordings of the
Boston
Symphony Orchestra conducted by
Karl
Muck and the
Philadelphia
Orchestra conducted by
Leopold
Stokowski in 1917; Victor's relationship with Stokowski and
Philadelphia remained firm for decades.
In 1920–21, Arturo Toscanini made his first recordings,
conducting the La
Scala
Orchestra, which was then on an American
tour. Victor went on to record the New York Philharmonic
Orchestra with Willem
Mengelberg and the St.
Louis Symphony Orchestra with Rudolph
Ganz from 1922, and the San Francisco Symphony
Orchestra under Alfred Hertz from
1925; Hertz's earliest discs, made at Victor's new Oakland
studios, were the company's last acoustical
orchestral sessions.
The origins of
country music as we
know it today can be traced to two seminal influences and a
remarkable coincidence.
Jimmie Rodgers and the
Carter Family are considered the
founders of country music and their songs were first captured at an
historic recording session in Bristol
, Tennessee
on August 1, 1927, where Ralph Peer was the talent scout and sound
recordist for Victor Records.
During the 1920s Victor also released "
race
records" (that is, records recorded by and marketed to
African Americans). These records were
scattered in Victor's regular popular music series until July, 1928
when they started the 38000 series.
Emile Berliner emigrated to Montreal, Quebec, Canada in 1900,
probably to escape the legal chaos created by his erstwhile "sales
manager," Frank Seaman, in the United States, since he still owned
his Canadian patents for his lateral disc records. He set up the
Berliner Gram-O-Phone Company to merchandise his machines and disc
records. The company was eventually controlled by Emile's son,
Herbert Berliner. Note that Herbert established his own,
essentially competing, record company, the
Compo Company, also in Montreal. In fact, in
1919 the Compo Company pressed records credited only to "Famous
Tenor," which used Victor sides cut by John McCormack; these were
quickly withdrawn, to be replaced by the same titles cut by Ernest
Hare doing a creditable McCormack impression.
From 1919 to 1921 Compo used the VTM(C) recording facilities for
cutting records; in 1921 Compo set up their own recording
facilities in Montreal. Herbert Berliner recorded extensively in
Montreal, for both VTM(C) and Compo...to the point that his
Victor-issued sides outnumbered US recordings. Needless to say,
this did not make the U.S. Victor firm at all happy, and Herbert
was quickly fired to be replaced by his brother in 1921.
A few years later, Victor acquired its Canadian counterpart,
Berliner Gramophone of Canada, in 1924. Interestingly enough, when
Victor introduced electric records in 1925, the Canadian firm
immediately announced "the new V.E. Process" records; this was
probably because the Compo Company had begun issuing electric
recordings, promoted as such, in late January 1925. As a result, a
special record, "You and I" by Jack Shilkret, promoting "the new
V.E. Process" was issued; this was Victor 19571, with the Canadian
promo version pairing acoustic (as issued in the U.S.) and electric
(apparently recorded in Montreal) versions of 19571-A.
Electrical recording era
In 1924, mostly under pressure from radio and
Autograph Records and Autograph's owner
Orlando R. Marsh, Victor switched from the old
acoustical or mechanical method of recording sound to the new
microphone based electrical system
developed by
Western Electric.
Victor called their version of the improved fidelity recording
process "Orthophonic", and sold a line of new designs of
phonographs to play these improved records, called "
Orthophonic Victrolas". The
large top-of- the-line "Credenza" models of Orthophonic Victrolas
had a 1.8 m (6 foot) long horn coiled inside the cabinet, and
are often considered the high point of the development of the
commercial wind-up phonograph, offering audio fidelity seldom
matched by most home electric phonographs until some 30 years
later. They were introduced on "Victor Day", November 2,
1925.
Victor's first commercial electrical recording was made at the
company's Camden, New Jersey studios on February 26, 1925. A group
of popular Victor artists, including
Billy Murray, Frank Banta,
Henry Burr, Albert Campbell, Frank Croxton, John
Meyer, and
Rudy Wiedoeft gathered to
record "A Miniature Concert." Several takes were recorded by the
old acoustic process, then additional takes were recorded
electrically for test purposes. The electric recordings turned out
well, and Victor issued the results that summer as two sides of one
12-inch 78 rpm record. Victor quickly recorded the Philadelphia
Orchestra conducted by Stokowski in a series of electrical
recordings, initially at its Camden, New Jersey studios and then in
Philadelphia's Academy of Music. Among Stokowski's first electrical
recordings were performances of
Danse Macabre by
Camille Saint-Saëns and
Marche
Slave by
Peter Tchaikovsky.
Frederick Stock and the
Chicago Symphony Orchestra made a
series of recordings for Victor, beginning in 1925, first in
Victor's Chicago studios and then in Orchestra Hall. The
San Francisco Symphony
Orchestra conducted by
Alfred Hertz
made a few acoustical recordings early in 1925, then switched to
electrical recordings in Oakland, California, which continued until
1930. Within a few years,
Serge
Koussevitsky began a long series of recordings with the
Boston Symphony Orchestra
in Boston's Symphony Hall. Toscanini made his first Victor
electrical recordings with the
New York Philharmonic
Orchestra in 1929.
In 1926, Johnson sold his controlling (but not holding) interest in
Victor to the banking firm of Seligman & Spyer, who in 1929
sold to the
Radio
Corporation of America, which then became known as the
Radio-Victor Division of the Radio Corporation of
America later
RCA Victor. (
See
RCA and RCA Records
for later history of the Victor brand name.)
Victor (Japan)
The Victor Company of Japan (
JVC), founded in
1927, severed its ties to RCA Victor at the start of
World War II, and is still one of the oldest
and most successful Japanese record labels as well as an
electronics giant. It also retains the Victor name in commercial
operations in Japan.

Victrola Model XVI, 1910s
The Victrola

Victrola Model VV-110, 1921
In September 1906, Johnson and his engineers designed a new line of
phonographs with the turntable and amplifying horn tucked away
inside a wooden cabinet. This was not done for reasons of audio
fidelity, but for visual aesthetics. The intention was to produce a
phonograph that looked less like a piece of machinery and more like
a piece of furniture. These internal horn machines, trademarked
with the name
Victrola, were first marketed to the
public in August of that year and were an immediate hit. Soon an
extensive line of Victrolas was marketed, ranging from small
tabletop models selling for $15, through many sizes and designs of
cabinets intended to go with the decor of middle-class homes in the
$100 to $250 range, up to $600 Chippendale and Queen Anne-style
cabinets of fine wood with gold trim designed to look at home in
elegant mansions. Victrolas became by far the most popular brand of
home phonograph, and sold in great numbers until the end of the
1920s. RCA Victor continued to market phonographs with the
"Victrola" name until the early 1970s.
See also
References
- http://www.pbs.org/jazz/images/exchange/victor-records.jpg
External links