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.
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.
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A Vinyl disc (record) that spins at 45 revolutions per minute
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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.
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.
vestax is selling a blank records 10 pounds per piece , u can use them with vestax vrx 2000 cutting machine
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.
Let it Be ,apple records 45
The 45 RPM records or vinyls sound as they were intended to sound when played at 45 revolutions per minute (at the 45 setting on a record player) while the 33 RPM records sound right at the 33 revolutions per minute speed. Then, there is the issue of size. Records that are 33 RPM are larger in diameter than 45's. Also 33's can hold more songs than 45's do. Usually, 45's have only one song on a side and were used as demo records for radio stations (yes, radio stations used to play music on records before they went to tapes and now to digital music on computers) and for releasing "singles" so that people could listen to a new band without having to pay for a whole album. 45 RPM records or vinyls are recorded at 45 revolutions per minute and are consequently played back at the same speed to achieve exact replication of the original recording. Subsequently, 33 1/3 RPMs are recorded at that speed, and played back at that speed to hear the audio as it was recorded. Generally 45s are recorded on smaller 7" disks, whereas 33 1/3s are recorded on larger, full sized 12" disks. This is not always the case, as some 12" records are recorded at 45 RPM for higher, or audiophile, sound quality.
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backed with the bw title was the b side
The version on vinyl, or a record (the LP at 33.3 RPM). I remember when there were 45 RPM records, usually just 1 song each side, and LP records or albums, which had the Long Playing version of songs, with, sometimes, repeated choruses, etc...Earlier vinyl records had 78 RPM records also.
A Vinyl disc (record) that spins at 45 revolutions per minute
The 45 RPM record was developed by RCA Victor in 1949 as a competing format for the 33 1/3 RPM (33) format of rival Columbia records that premiered in 1948. Eventually the 45 RPM format (7 inches in diameter with a one-inch center hole) was adopted for shorter recordings while 33 RPM (12 inches in diameter with a 1/4 inch center hole) was used for so called LP (long playing) albums. This eliminated the need to reduce the groove width or quality of 45 RPM recordings.