Let it Be ,apple records 45
Bobby Darin's "Splish Splash" becomes the first eight-track recording to be pressed into a 45 RPM single.
They typically drag because that's how they make sound. If it didn't dray there would be no music. If you mean that it sounds slow, that is because as stated above, it is part of the process. Better turntables have a strobe to adjust the timing, or speed of the rotation to keep it at 33 rpm or 45 rpm or 78 rpm. Which brings me to the next part of the answer. Make sure that the speed of the turntable matches the speed of the recording. Playing a 45 rpm record at 33 rpm will sound very slow and dragging. Most record players and turntables have a selector for 33 and 45 rpm. 78rpm records use a different needle, and not all players will play these older format records.
When did the 45 rpm record come out?Read more:When_did_the_45_rpm_record_come_out
I'm not sure if it was made available to the public but they had many 45 RPM versions on Green Vinyl but they were for jukeboxes.
I've seen it called a 45 RPM Adapter.
This was called an 45 RPM adapter or spindle adapter, since it allowed you to play 45-RPM records on a player with a regular long-play spindle.
This was called an 45 RPM adapter or spindle adapter, since it allowed you to play 45-RPM records on a player with a regular long-play spindle.
There are many valuable 45 rpm records, some of them worth thousands of dollars. Some of the more valuable 45 rpm records are by: Bob Dylan, The Beatles, and Elvis Presley.
Elvis recorded That's All Right on July 5, 1954. The flip side, Blue Moon of Kentucky was recorded July 7, 1954. The record was released on both 45 RPM and 78 RPM on July 19, 1954 as SUN 209.
there are several speeds for vinyl records, but for common formats it is 33 rpm, 45 rpm, 78 rpm and actually 33 1/3 rpm. that's what they were called 45's because they made 45 revolutions or rounds but it's actually revolutions per minute.
The 45 rpm record was followed by the , which in turn was followed by the eight-track tape player.