The role of women in the phonograph & gramophone industries

Odeon Records

This research explores the key role that women played in the early development of the recorded music industry, focusing on the period between the 1890s, when Edison’s phonograph first experienced commercial success, until the Great Depression of the early 1930s. 


Study made by Áurea Domínguez and supported by the City of London Phonograph and Gramophone Society Richard Taylor Bursary Grant 2023. The topic will be presented within various international contexts, including academic conferences and presentations.

Women in phonograph advertisements

A differentiated analysis of female figures in the advertising of phonographs and gramophones appearing in countless magazines and newspapers of the period allows us to approach domestic music in an entirely new context. The image of women in advertising, especially but not only, in advertising aimed at women, women’s magazines is evidence of the relevance they had in the early recording industry and in decisions about what music was being played in the domestic sphere.

The Pathéphone gramophone. Pathé

A large part of the advertising campaigns featured women at their centre and the female figure is prominent in the majority of advertisement illustrations and photographs. A multi-faceted review of the advertising used to promote phonographs, gramophones, and recordings, coupled with research into other contemporary sources, will bring us closer to understanding not only the development of the recorded music industry between 1890 and 1930, but also the significant role of women as performers and consumers of these new sound technologies.

As the new sound technologies of recording and reproducing instruments began to be incorporated into the domestic sphere, the musical dynamics of private households adapted accordingly. Women played a decisively active role in the musical activity of fin de siècle bourgeois households and it is worth asking whether their status as musical decision-makers continued into the early years of the twentieth century. 

The Aeolian Vocalion Gramophone
The Aeolian Vocalion Gramophone, 1917
Victor gramophone. “At the summer home” 1904
Victor Talking Machine Company, At the Summer home, 1904
The voice by the fireside. Victor 1902
Victor Talkikg Machine, The voice by the fireside, 1902

Music education

Edison Phonograph. The Magic of Sweet Music
The Edison Phonograph, The magic of sweet music, ca. 1904
Victor gramophone. Listening and Learning Victor Talking Machine Company. Advertisement 1901
Victor gramophone. “Listening and Learning” Victor Talking Machine Company. Advertisement 1901
The Edison Phonograph Play this next, Mother
The Edison Phonograph, Play this next, Mother, ca. 1889

Music at home

Although music was traditionally seen as an important part of women’s general education during the nineteenth century, they were often excluded from composition and public performances. Their skills were relegated to the household for their family to enjoy. 

The old love and the new. Edison Home Phonograph. Advertisement
The Edison Phonograph, The old love and the new, ca. 1900
The Edison Phonograph “Have you heard Play an Amberol record”
The Edison Phonograph, Have you heard the Edison phonograph Play an Amberol record?, ca. 1909

Women playing the records

The phonograph, and soon after the gramophone, transitioned the process of listening and musical reception away from the live performance of an instrument, changing the role of a late Victorian lady from playing the piano to becoming an expert in the newest developments in early sound technology and the performance of recorded music.

Edison Phonograph Woman DJ
The Edison Phonograph, You select your program to suit your audience, 1912

Recorded music was introduced into society as something intended to be enjoyed at home, the environment for which women were typically responsible at that time. 

Entretaining the Boys Edison phonograph
The Edison Phonograph, Entretaining the Boys, 1905

Buying and selling talking machines

Paz et Silva Shop Paris 1930
Paz et Silva Shop, Paris 1930

Phonographs and gramophones were consumer goods that were generally selected for purchase by women. As they were the ones responsible for the interior decoration of their homes, they were also in charge of selecting the appropriate machine for music reproduction, as well as the most appropriate type of music to play—after all, they were the ones spending most of the time there. 

Do Men or Women Prove the bigger Purchasers of Talking Machines and record Outfits? TMW 1919
Do Men or Women Prove the bigger Purchasers of Talking Machines and record Outfits? . Talking Machine World. Feb.1919
The Ladies as a Force in Upbuilding Dealers' trade. Talking Machine World. March 1907
The Ladies as a Force in Upbuilding Dealers’ trade. Talking Machine World. March 1907

Burgeoning department stores, which quickly became an important marketplace for domestic consumption, created sophisticated phonograph and record departments with music rooms that not only demonstrated the possibilities of the instruments, but also created a space for women to assess how the gramophones would fit in their home environment.

Fletcher's Music Store record listening booths, Victoria ca. 1920.
Fletcher’s Music Store record listening booths, Victoria ca. 1920.
Edison Bell Phonograph catalogue, London 1905
Edison Bell Phonograph catalogue, London 1905
Department store. Talking Machine World 1917
Department store. Talking Machine World 1917

In one sense, phonographs were simply domestic consumer products like any others, for example home sewing machines, and washing machines. The recorded music industry understood this and created campaigns and publicity aimed at women, as they were the most likely to purchase their goods.

The Edison Phonograph Double service
Edison Phonograph, Double service, ICS, 1905
Victor gramophone. “Did you get a Victor for Christmas?” Victor Talking Machine Company. Advertisement
Victor gramophone, Did you get a Victor for Christmas?
Victorola gramophone. “Waiting to play for you” Victor Talking Machine Company. Advertisement 1925
Victor Talking Machine Company, 1925
Fashion Gramophone “Aux adversaires du phonographe » Machines Parlantes Thomson 1934
Thomson, 1934

Many stores chose to hire women as sales staff, as their traditional music education gave them the background necessary to memorise and navigate the long and the ever-changing lists of new record releases. 
This example of the questions for a job interview for a sales women shows the knowledge required for the position. “Selecting efficient record sales women” TMW 15 December 1925, p.62

Selecting efficient record sales women

New life style

As new models were introduced, for example the portable gramophones of the 1920s, they were marketed to and adopted by women as lifestyle or fashion accessories. Furthermore, as the record industry flourished, some women were able to leverage their experience as domestic record consumers into paying jobs. 

Ludwig Hohlwein, poster artwork for a Grammophone shop, 1925. Featuring portable record players: Glückliche Reise! Munich, Germany Munich, 1925
Glückliche Reise! Portable gramophone Munich, 1925
Arroyola Flapper “your best friend”. The Carroyola Company of America. Advertisement 1925.
Arroyola Flapper, Carroyola Company, 1925
Portable gramophone. “Musik im Grünen mit Orchestrola”. Orchestrola 1933.
Portable gramophone, Musik im Grünen mit Orchestrola, 1933
Modelo 101 HMV “El Portátil para sus excursiones” La voz de su amo. Ca. 1925
101 HMV, El Portátil para sus excursiones, La voz de su amo, ca. 1925

1930s: Change of paradigms

It was only in the 1930s, in the wake of the global economic crisis and the breakdown of the entire consumer system, that the female-oriented marketing strategies of the music industry changed.

Selling gramophones for her. Thomson, Paris 1934
Selling gramophones for her. Thomson, Paris 1934
Christine Frederick. Selling Mrs. Consumer, 1929, p.50
Christine Frederick. Selling Mrs. Consumer, 1929, p.50
Selling radios for him. Thomson, Paris 1934
Selling radios for him. Thomson, Paris 1934

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Awards

This research was made posible thanks to the Richard Taylor Bursary Grant 2023 from the City of London Phonograph and Gramophone Society

The City of London Phonograph and Gramophone Society

Events

Research topic presented at:

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Bangor University

The Fourth International Conference on Women’s Work in Music – Department of Music, Drama and Performance, Bangor University, UK, 4–6 September 2023.

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Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona

Research seminar