To find the model number on a His Master's Voice gramophone, look for a label or decal on the front or side of the cabinet, often near the turntable or underneath the lid. The model number may also be stamped or engraved on the metal parts of the mechanism. If you can't find it there, check the base or underside of the gramophone, as some models have their information located there. Additionally, consulting a manual or online resources specific to your model can provide guidance.
The Hmv label a.k.a. His Masters voice
it's worth around 800 euro in good working condition
Y'know how the HMV logo is a little dog listening to a gramophone? Well, he is listening to his master playing his voice on the gramophone. So HMV stands for "His Master's Voice".
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.
His Masters Voice
poo!
The first recording on a gramophone record was made by Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville in 1860. It was a recording of his own voice singing the French folk song "Au clair de la lune."
Michael Douglas did the voice over.
"The Dog in the Master's Voice" is a famous painting by the artist Francis Barraud, created in 1891. The artwork features a dog named Nipper, who is depicted listening intently to a gramophone, representing loyalty and the bond between pets and their owners. Nipper became the mascot for the HMV (His Master's Voice) record label, symbolizing the connection between the music and the listener. The image has become iconic in popular culture, representing nostalgia for the early days of recorded sound.
in Milan
The dog's name was Nipper and the title was His Master's Voice. http://www.danbbs.dk/~erikoest/nipper.htm
You need a long answer, not a short answer. First there was the Edison phonograph, which recorded speech or music on a wax cylinder. Then there was the Berliner gramophone, which recorded on a shellac disc. Both of these were mechanical and the sound came out of a horn. Later a cabinet was designed so that the horn principle was folded into a box and the sound came out the front. In 1925 mechanical (acoustic) recording was replaced by electrical recording, but the cylinder was losing its popularity, so Edison went out of the phonograph business in 1929. Because "phonograph" was the original invention, disc records were often called phonograph records in America, although the term gramophone survived in England. The biggest record magazine over there is still called "Gramophone." To see what it looks like, you should find a famous painting called "His Master's Voice," which showed a dog listening to a voice coming out of the horn. Actually, that would have been an Edison phonograph, but the gramophone company liked the picture so much that they had it repainted to look like a disc gramophone, even though their machine couldn't produce the sound of the dog's master's voice because you could only make home recordings on a cylinder, not a disc in those days. So the painting became the trademark of The Gramophone Company, which put "His Master's Voice" on the record label in England, and also of the Victor Talking Maching Company, its American affiliate, which became RCA Victor. You might see some old records with that painting on the label.