Sound is made of waves, these waves are cut into records as grooves. Based on the amplitude and frequency, the groove changes. A needle runs in this groove and transfers the vibrations to a diaphragm. From here a preamp picks up the sound and amplifies it to a level that is reasonable for the stereo to reproduce. The stereo amplifies this signal to whatever volume your choose.
Grooves on the record cause the "needle" to vibrate. The vibrations are converted to an electric signal, which is amplified, and then converted back to vibrations of diaphragms within the loudspeakers, i.e. to air vibrations (=sound).
A gramaphone is a device used for communication. It was made in the same use as the telephone before the telephone was invented.
you pull the arm over the record the spin the spinning thing
The gramophone is most commonly known as the record player. It worked by placing the needle on to the groves of the record so that music would play.
Berliner Gramophone ended in 1924.
Monophone
The Gramophone Company absorbed the Zonophone company. The Gramophone company's main label was the His Master's Voice dog with its nose into the gramophone horn. When it took over it restyled the label very closely to its HMV one, but changed it away from the HMV image (it was to be the down-market range) and came up with a slightly different design.
Caruso Known as the great Caruso
It is short for grammophone. This is what the actual award is shaped as. Grammophones played music way before records, cds, cassettes etc. existed
Gramophone Company ended in 1931.
Said the Gramophone was created in 2003.
Berliner Gramophone was created in 1889.
Adventures in Gramophone was created in 2005.
the first gramophone was made in england in 1934
Gramophone Company was created in 1897.
Berliner Gramophone ended in 1924.
You can buy a gramophone in Tigerton at the Tool shop for 1.1million.
the first gramophone was made in england in 1934
Golden Gramophone Award was created in 1996.
the first musical gramophone was invented in late Victorian
He didn't. Thomas Edison created the gramophone.