May Day May Day


Tell the Truth Which Was Your First Record Player

We all gotta start somewhere. Did you inherit some old console TV/Hi-FI or maybe a Singer portable swinger. When your sister went to college did she leave behind a Box Top Record Changer ?

The question is what record player was the first one you actually began playing records on. Which way did you discover the tactile joy of spinning those 45's and LP's

And just for fun if you can remember what was the first record you bought with your OWN money. The one you choose above a Banana Split at Woolworth's for 49 cents.

45, LP or 78 the only criteria is that it be with your own money not something your parents got you.

Here is Mine.

First Record Player

Emenee Barbie and Ken

First Record

Joey Dee and the Starlighters-Peppermint Twist-Roulette 45 rpm

First LP

Meet the Beatles- Capital Records

Happy May Day

Best Regards

Groovey Records

Listening to-
Louis Armsrtong-Rockin Chair-Basin Street Blues-St.James infirary-When It's Sleepy Time Down South - RCA Victor Gold Standard Series EPA-5000
128x128groovey
Record player installed on top of a Fisher receiver in a three piece system (2 speakers + receiver with record player installed in a cut out on top of it). The system was called the Fisher 105. I think the turntable (changer, actually) was an OEM from BSR. Cheapo Pickering cartridge. I saved my lunch money for a year in high school and bought this system for $300.

LP? I think it was "The Now Sound of the Brass Ring" by the Brass Ring (still have it). I recall reveling in the clarity and beauty of the sound in contrast with my parents' Magnavox console.
thorens td150 junk sale 22 years ago
never looked back since
cost
five uk pounds
absolutely hooked ever since
terry
Forgot about records of my choice back when I was a pup.
Stones High tide and green grass
Steppenwolf live
Mountain Nantuket sleighride
Savoy Brown raw sienna
My mom gave me her old record player when I was around five or so. I don't remember the name of it but it looked like a grey briefcase. The table would flip down when the clasp at the top was opened and the speakers were on detachable hinges at the sides. I loved the thing. My Dad owned a few bars and would bring home restaurant bus trays full of 45s. I couldn't read yet but I sorted the records by the pictures on the label. I had big stacks of Atlantic, Columbia, MCA and Capital singles from the mid 60's through the '70's. I would spend all day spinning records. I think I played "Dueling Banjos" so much the needle wore clean through to the other side of the disc. Ah...good times.

Cheers,
Jim
My Mom & Dad got tired of listening to me whine about wanting to play rock & roll on their stereo ( a nice looking walnut veneered Zenith console.) Mom was a music snob who used her love of classical music as way to put down anyone who enjoyed "lesser" forms of music and she sure didn't want to listen to what her teenage son did. So Dad took me to some old guys house who was selling his small Zenith unit with hinged speakers and we got that along with some free Hank Williams records. I promptly recovered the speakers' grills with a suitably psychedelic paisley cloth and went out and bought the Grateful Deads', Doors, and Mothers of Inventions first albums at Kmart. I think they were about $3.50 each.