
wapper wrote:I recently unearthed a two record set by "The English String Quartet" put out on Columbia's label (London). The records appear to have never been played, they are in an unmarked condition. The speed is 80 on the label and not 78. The recording is of Haydn's Opus64 in 4 parts. The records have no lead in groove and the needle finish groove doesn't go to the label. My question is are these records as scarce as I believe and are they worth anything to collectors?


wapper wrote:Hi Coffee Phil Thanks for your response. I believe these are vertical cut. I've used a close up magnifying lens on them and the tracks are parallel without
horizontal waving. From what I've been able to find so far it would appear they predate electronic recording (i.e. pre 1925). I don't want to use a modern narrow needle on them in case I damage the grooves. That they've been acoustically cut at 80 RPM suggests they may be valuable. Being that old also suggests there is probably debris in the trench which will need removing before anything else. I'm aware the trenches can pick up dirt even if they haven't been used. Any suggestions re cleaning / washing them, other than keeping the labels dry and not using anything abrasive?
Regards
Wapper



Whitneyville wrote:Shellac doesn't tolerate water well as it ages, so soap and water is almost a "last resort" cleaning for me. I have some 60 year-old non-benzene flammable spot dry-cleaning fluid (we call it naptha in the US, I believe it's known as parrafin spirit in the UK) and it doesn't harm shellac. Acoustic recordings were made on so many mediums and at wildly different speeds and vertical or horizontal cuts, outside-in and inside-out starts, and different groove widths. Someone could write a dozen volume set of books on this and not cover every "system" or method used. Strangely, they all seemed to play back pretty well on acoustic players.

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