PHONO TERIA
12/22/2025
PHONO TERIA encouraged 🌈
In the 1920s and early 1930s Americans flouted traditions. Women known as Flappers drove automobiles, wore short skirts, and smoked and drank in public. Gangsters ran speakeasies defying prohibition laws and leading to a spike in crime. Young people played and danced to strange music. On this day in Washington (Dec. 22, 1933) a state legislator blamed the social disorder on “jazz intoxication.”
State Representative William A. Allen, who lived near Alki Beach, introduced a bill claiming “people are becoming dangerously demented, confused and distracted or bewildered by jazz music.” He urged Washington Governor Clarence Martin to “bring about immediate cessation” of playing jazz in public. Violators faced heavy penalties. “All persons convicted of being jazzily intoxicated shall go before the Superior Court and be sent to an insane asylum,” Allen threatened.
His bill calling for a commission to study the deleterious effects of jazz on society never made it out of committee. Jazz intoxication has spread unchecked in America ever since.
Post written courtesy of David J Jepsen - Historian
Image from WSHS collection. Four women, members of a jazz band, holding different types of saxophones, pose outdoors in Puyallup, WA. Photographic print. Creator Marvin D. Boland Creation Date Sep. 23, 1922 Catalog ID: 1957.64.B6663
11/10/2025
Phonoteria was gifted a few phonOcord records. They were records that you could live-cut your own by yourself with the special two arm phonograph system with built-in microphone. It was a bit of a fad in the late '50s and early 60s. We've previously posted about the similar VOICE-A-GRAM postcard.
PhonOcord, also called RECORDIO, were slightly smaller than the emerging 45s size and played at 78rpm. It was also a poor quality recording. They cut the groove from the inside to the outside that makes it look almost like it's playing backwards. It's so close to the spin-hole that modern auto-return arms won't reach it. See comments to listen to a bit of one of these phonOcords.
10/09/2025
♾️❤️Yoko 🎁Lennon
Get me drunk and I'll tell you about hugging her.
Yoko Ono - Wikipedia Yoko Ono (Japanese: 小野 洋子, romanized: Ono Yōko, usually spelled in katakana as オノ・ヨーコ; born February 18, 1933) is a retired Japanese multimedia artist, singer, songwriter, and peace activist. Her work also encompasses performance art and filmmaking.[1]
08/10/2025
Phonoteria did it first in Seattle with Victrolas!!!
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