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album

 
Dictionary: al·bum   (ăl'bəm) pronunciation
 
n.
  1. A book with blank pages for the insertion and preservation of collections, as of stamps or photographs.
    1. A phonograph record, especially a long-playing record stored in a slipcase.
    2. A set of musical recordings stored together in jackets under one binding.
    3. The bound set of jackets for such a set.
    4. A recording of different musical pieces.
  2. A printed collection of musical compositions, pictures, or literary selections.
  3. A tall, handsomely printed book, popular especially in the 19th century, often having profuse illustrations and short, sentimental texts.

[Latin, blank tablet, from neuter of albus, white.]


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Architecture: album
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In ancient Roman architecture, a space on the surface of a wall covered with white plaster, located in a public place, on which public announcements and records, etc. were written.


 

Albums (from the Latin albus, white) were used before the invention of photography to collect prints, drawings, music, and poems. More personal collections, often kept by women, mingled these with contributions from friends, printed ephemera, and cut-paper work. By the beginning of the 19th century, albums were essential drawingroom accessories, used as a focus for social interaction as much as for solitary contemplation. In the 1840s photographic prints were added to this tradition. Amateur and professional photographers regularly made and exchanged albums as gifts (Julia Margaret Cameron), as samplers of their work (Charles Dodgson), or as limited editions for sale (Hill and Adamson). Early photographically illustrated publications, like Henry Talbot's The Pencil of Nature (1844-6), or Anna Atkins's Photographs of British Algae (1843-53), were made by pasting photographs on the pages.

Carte de visite albums were the first produced especially for photographs. Their double-layered pages were pre-cut with window mounts, with slots through which the cartes were inserted. Very popular in the 1860s and 1870s, these albums mixed family portraits with those of celebrities. Designed to be displayed to visitors, they showcased the networking skills of the women of the house in keeping up social connections, and in obtaining desirable celebrity photographs. Closed, albums were decorative objects, in their tooled leather and gilt covers complete with gold clasps. Open, they could entertain visitors while the hostess was otherwise engaged, or be accompanied by a verbal commentary, varied to suit the person being addressed. More accomplished women made mixed-media albums, creating collages using cut-up photographs and watercolour or ink drawings, combining professional with amateur photographs. Often, these women's albums—for example, those of Lady Filmer—imaginatively interpreted definitions of femininity as a socially constructed role.

By the late 19th century, album manufacture had become a considerable industry, with Germany dominating the market; in 1880 there were 48 specialist firms in Berlin alone, exporting about one-third of their output to North America. Materials ranged from leather and mother-of-pearl to cheap substitutes like celluloid, with prices to match. In the 1890s a craze for novelties spawned all kinds of decorative embellishments, even integral clocks and music boxes. As gelatin emulsions, easy-to-use cameras, and processing services made photographs cheaper and more plentiful, carte de visite-and cabinet-format albums were replaced by more informal volumes with coloured, thin pages. (But albums with window mounts continued to be used, especially by committed amateurs doing their own printing, as gelatin papers were difficult to paste down without professional facilities.) Loose-leaf binders and black pages became popular after the First World War. In the 1950s postcard-sized slip-in albums made from transparent plastic pockets became popular to collect colour snapshots.

The expansion of amateur photography during the 20th century diversified the content of albums, as photographs became more intimate and varied in style and subject matter: fully organized visual diaries like the ‘baby book’; albums concentrating on one particular event like a wedding or a holiday abroad (but then sometimes including postcards, brochures, menus, and other items as well as photographs); casual albums compiled in the order in which photographs came back from processing. Categorization, however, is difficult, as photographs taken for personal uses are too often unconcerned with either following or breaking conventions, and can at the same time infinitely personalize the most staid poses and themes. Whether as a highly crafted collection, as a convenient container to store and view images, or—stretching the definition—reduced to a box of prints, the photographic album has become the main medium through which photographs are used to explore, construct, and confirm identity. Acts of self-reflection, such as looking at and collecting images of personal relevance, have become an indispensable feature of a modern sensibility. Viewing, sharing, and passing around albums has become an established ritual of familial gatherings, and a crucial aspect of the construction and maintenance of personal and cultural memories.

The metaphor of the album as a site for the construction, as much as the representation, of identity, was seized upon by artists in the 20th century, while album making has been abandoned by most professional photographers in favour of illustrated magazines, photography books, and limited-edition portfolios. The Viennese poet Peter Altenberg (1859-1919) made albums which, by combining his highly visual poems with snapshots and postcards, were an integral part of the construction of his persona as a modern flâneur, regenerating culture by taking on feminine genres and mass-produced images. A number of contemporary artists use and subvert the album, extending its range to include images of sickness and moments of abjection (Richard Billingham), and by representing unconventional ‘families’ based on bonds that are not familial in the traditional sense (Nan Goldin). In Beyond the Family Album (1979), Jo Spence rearranged her own family album, rereading it through the insights given by social history, feminism, and psychoanalysis. She reworked individual images from the past to bring out and make visible the conflicts, frustrations, and unhappiness that had been glossed over by the codes of photography, and by her mother's editing and captioning. Spence argued that the album's denials—of work, separation, illness, and daily drudgery—can be seen less as a glossing-over of realities than as evidence of frustrated maternal desires and feminine aspirations. In Sans souci (1991), a work using images found in Nazi family albums, Christian Boltanski reconsidered the cultural and historical function of photographic portraits and albums. German soldiers, photographed off duty, relaxing at home and with their families, appear only as affectionate fathers, lovers, and husbands. The family-album mode of narrative effectively, despite the uniforms, masks the fact that they are also instruments of Nazism. Their familial world is constructed as separate from the ideological and historical one. Boltanski shows how photographs convey not reality but a set of cultural codes, in this case those associated with the idealization of family life as a locus of enduring affections and benevolent feelings.

It is too early to assess the impact of digital photography on the album. On the one hand, digital techniques are dematerializing the album into infinite collections to be viewed on the computer or television screen and perhaps the Internet, where a growing number of family albums and personal or institutional collections can be inspected. On the other, the ease with which photographs can be printed digitally on a variety of surfaces and objects has facilitated a renewed emphasis on the photograph as a physical object to be touched and handled with casual but emotionally poignant intimacy.

— Patrizia di Bello

See also family history, photography and; phototherapy; posing for the camera.

Bibliography

  • Maas, E., “‘Das Fotoalbum 1858-1918’”, in Das Fotoalbum 1858-1918: Eine Dokumentation zur Kultur-und Sozialgeschichte (1975).
  • Hirsch, M. (ed.), The Familial Gaze (1999).
  • Batchen, G., “‘Vernacular Photographies’”, in Each Wild Idea (2001).
  • Lensing, L., and Barker, A. (eds.), Peter Altenberg: Semmering 1912 (2002).
  • Noble, A., and Hughes, A. (eds.), Phototextualities: Intersections of Photography and Narrative (2003)
 
Wikipedia: Album
Top
Early record "albums" were packages of 78 RPM records in book form, resembling photograph albums

An album or record album is a collection of related audio or music tracks distributed to the public. The most common way is through commercial distribution, although smaller artists will often distribute directly to the public by selling their albums at live concerts or on their websites.

The tracks on an album may be related by subject, mood or sound, and may even be designed to express a unified message or tell a story (as in the case of a concept album), or the tracks may simply represent a convenient grouping of recordings made at one time or place, or recordings whose commercial rights are controlled by a single record label. A group of audio tracks is considered to be an album if it has a generally consistent track list (often with minor differences or bonus tracks in different territories, or if the album is "reissued" at different times). An album may be released in a single format, such as on compact disc, or in multiple media formats, ranging from physical ones such as CDs, DVD audio, cassettes and vinyl records, to digital ones such as MP3 and AAC files or streaming audio.

The term "record album" originated from the fact that 78-RPM phonograph disc records were kept in a bound container resembling a photogaph album. The first collection of records to be called an "album" was Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker Suite, released in April 1909 as a four-disc set by Odeon Records.[1][2] It retailed for 16 shillings (approximately £56 or US$101 in 2005 currency).

In 1948, Columbia produced the first 12-inch, 33⅓-RPM microgroove record made of vinyl.[1] With a running time of 23 minutes per side, these new records contained as much music as the old-style album of records and, thus, took on the name "album". For many years, the standard industry format for popular music was an album of twelve songs, originally the number related to payment of composer royalties.

Originally, albums ranged in duration from half an hour to an hour, depending on the genre and record label. American pop albums tended to be around a half hour; British pop albums were somewhat longer, often containing 14 songs instead of 11 or 12; jazz albums were longer still; and classical albums were the longest of all. From the dawn of the "album era" (in jazz, about 1954; in rock, about 1962) until about the mid-1960s, albums were often recorded as quickly as possible, sometimes in single sessions. (Prestige Records and Blue Note Records were famous for this; as well, The Beatles' first album and The Byrds' first four albums were all largely recorded in single sessions.)

Vinyl LP records had two sides, each comprising one half of the album. If a pop or rock album contained tracks released separately as commercial singles, these were often traditionally placed in particular positions on the album. A common configuration was to have the album led off by the second and third singles, followed by a ballad. The first single would lead off side 2. In the past, many singles (such as the Beatles' "Hey Jude") did not appear on albums, but others (such as the Beatles' "Come Together" and "Something") were also part of an album released concurrently. Today many commercial albums of music tracks feature one or more singles, which are released separately to radio, TV or the Internet as a way of promoting the album. Albums have also been issued that are compilations of older tracks not originally released together, such as singles not originally found on albums, b-sides of singles, or unfinished "demo" recordings.

Album sets of the past were arranged "in sequence" for phonographs equipped with record changers. In the case of a two-record set, for example, sides one and four would be printed on one record, and sides two and three on the other. The two records would then be stacked up on a spindle especially equipped to handle such albums, with side one on the bottom and side two on the top. The record containing side one would then automatically drop down on the turntable, and the tone arm containing the stylus needle would then automatically play the record. When that side was finished, the tone arm would swing back to allow the record containing side two to drop down on top of the record containing side one, and automatically begin to play.

Record changers persisted throughout the LP era, but were discontinued after it was discovered that the stacking up of records had the potential to warp them.

Today, with the vinyl record no longer being used as the primary form of distribution, the term "album" can still be applied to any sound recording collection, such as those on compact disc, MiniDisc, Compact audio cassette, and digital or MP3 albums. Cover art is also considered an integral part of the album. Many albums also come with liner notes and inserts giving background information or analysis of the recording, reprinted lyrics, images of the performers, or additional artwork and text. These are now often found in the form of CD booklets.

Due to the large capacity of new media (compact discs originally ran to 74 minutes, later extended to 80 minutes) and the lack of any formal "side" divisions, the matter of how long an album should be is open to debate, although most albums today are at least 30 minutes long. Usually, rock albums with a particularly fast tempo, such as albums in punk rock and non-progressive thrash metal are the shortest, then albums in mainstream rock and pop; then hip hop albums are slightly longer. Progressive varieties of metal and rock, such as Dream Theater and Tool, may have songs around ten minutes long individually. Albums like these are usually around or over an hour. According to the rules of the UK Charts, a recording counts as an "album" if either it has more than four tracks or lasts more than 25 minutes.[3] Sometimes shorter albums are referred to as EPs, an abbreviation of extended play, "extended" meaning longer than a single but shorter than an LP. The term "mini-album" may also be used.

If an album becomes too long to fit this format, a recording artist may make the decision to release a double album where two vinyl LPs or compact discs are packaged together in a single case, or a triple album containing three LP's or compact discs.

Recording artists who have an extensive back catalogue will often re-release several CDs in one single box with a unified design, often containing one or more albums, or a compilation of previously unreleased recordings. These are known as box sets. Some musical artists have also released more than three compact discs or LP records of new recordings at once, in the form of boxed sets, although in that case the work is still usually considered to be an album.

See also

References


 
Translations: Album
Top

Dansk (Danish)
n. - album, grammofonplade

Nederlands (Dutch)
album, L.P.

Français (French)
n. - album

Deutsch (German)
n. - Album

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - λεύκωμα, άλμπουμ, άλμπουμ, δίσκος 33 στροφών

Italiano (Italian)
album, albo

Português (Portuguese)
n. - álbum (m)

Русский (Russian)
альбом, диск

Español (Spanish)
n. - disco, álbum

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - album, LP-skiva

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
相簿, 来宾签到簿, 集邮簿, 唱片集, 唱片套册, 专辑

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 相簿, 來賓簽到簿, 集郵簿, 唱片集, 唱片套冊, 專輯

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 앨범, 방문객 명부

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - アルバム, レコード, 文集, レコードアルバム

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) "ألبوم " تواقيغ أو طوابع أو صور فوتوغرافيه أو أسطوانات مسجله, مختارات أدبيه أو موسيقيه‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮אלבום, תקליט ארוך-נגן‬


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Architecture. McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Architecture and Construction. Copyright © 2003 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Photography Encyclopedia. The Oxford Companion to the Photograph. Copyright © 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Album" Read more
Translations. Copyright © 2007, WizCom Technologies Ltd. All rights reserved.  Read more

 

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