Citronic

1912 RUSSIAN EMPIRE SYRENA NEW IMPERIAL RECORD PASTE OVER LABEL 78RPM 10” RECORD

Description: MEGA RARE 1912 78 RPM 10” SHELLAC RECORD.PASTE-OVER LABEL! READ THE STORY BELOW!LABEL:NEW IMPERIAL RECORD (SYRENA GRAND RECORD)PRESSING NUMBER: No. 8471 / No. 8472SIDE 1MEDLEY ON RUSSIAN SONGS“HARMONY ORCHESTRA” UNDER V. VARSHAVSKYSIDE 2MEDLEY ON “MALORUSSIAN” SONGS“HARMONY ORCHESTRA” UNDER V. VARSHAVSKYSTANDARD COVER!THE RECORD IS VISUALLY GRAGED AS VG In April of 1912 there appeared on the Russian Gramophone market records of a previously unknown label “New Imperial Record”. The labels were of a very unusual design: the upper half was scarlet with a picture of a lyre and the black inscription “New Imperial Record”; the lower half was green. After close inspection one could readily discern that in reality they were “Syrena Grand Record” records with scarlet stickers concealing the upper halves of the original labels. In Saint-Petersburg these records first appeared in the musical shop of well-known trader Melnikov on Sadovaya Street, and were sold for the same prices as the originals. But why was it necessary to hide the original Syrena labels? “Gammofonny Mir” magazine was thrilled by this mystery and decided to carry out its own journalist's investigation, the results of which were published in issue No.9 of May, 1 1912. Unfortunately, I do not have the original article, but according to materials published in other publications one can draw the following conclusions: It turned out that those records were bought out “Syrena Record” rejects;“Syrena Record” by all means distanced themselves from this transaction. For instance, the Company’s chief representative in Russia, Mr. Rozmyslov, announced that he did not sell to Mr. Melnikov the rejected records. Later, “Syrena Record” management even published the following warning: “The records with “New Imperial Record” label have nothing to do with registered “Syrena Grand Record” Trading Mark. We are requesting customers do not buy those records.”;It remained unclear how Mr. Melnikov had gotten the rejected records.It’s understandable that Mr. Melnikov was accused of “dishonesty”, and those “New Imperial Record” discs were called nothing else but “piratical” ones. Was it really so? More than 100 years has passed since then, and to unravel the truth that additionally was so thoroughly concealed at the time is nearly impossible task. However, with the help of observation, logic and common sense we can try to reconstruct more or less a truthful picture, and even possibly rehabilitate the good name of trader Melnikov. Let’s start with accusations of “piracy”. It is a known fact that the basis of business of all “piratical companies” was manufacturing and selling illegal copies of original records bought in retail. They were doing it against the will and interests of producing companies causing them both: material and moral losses as well as unfair competition – pirates did not have to pay fees to artists. All these characteristics are not totally applicable to “New Imperial Record” discs. “New Imperial Record” used to sell exclusively original “Syrena” records that were legally bought in wholesale from the producing company. There were neither material losses nor unfair competition for “Syrena” because the records were sold for the same price as Syrenas. In order to fool potential customers some piratical companies used so-called “mimicry” – their label designs were very similar to the originals. Most of all “suffered” were Zonophon records with the green label. They were imitated by “Luxophone”, “Zolophon” and even “International Parlophon” labels and this is not complete list. Another example is “Fonotipia” – “Melodiephon” pair. The later one was even called “The Russian Fonotipia”. The flashy scarlet “New Imperial Record” sticker is the vivid evidence of exactly the opposite intention – to be distinct from the original. If one discounts the fact that “New Imperial Record” labels were affixed post-factum, the business of the two companies very well falls into the common scheme when company A places orders to company B for printing of a batch of records bearing company A labels (i.e. today's common practice of “outsourcing”). Nobody would even think to call company A a “piratical” one in this case. By the way, “Syrena” never tried to bring “New Imperial Record” to court, it just wanted to distance itself from the latter. The second accusation is selling “faulty” records for “regular” price. From the first glance it may look like a major one, but let’s try to understand the nature of the rejects. Thanks to efforts of Russian-Records.com Participants, there have been collected a number of “New Imperial Record” records, sufficient to draw an interesting conclusion: upon close inspection one can easily see that each record has at least one label with typographical error or mistake.each “New Imperial Record” record ever seen by the Author of this article has some kind of typographical error. One may conclude that these mistakes are the only reason for the rejections! By the way, in order for the whole record to be rejected, it is only sufficient to have a mistake on one side. The indirect proof of long-term “friendship” between “New Imperial Record” and “Syrena Record” is the fact that there are at least 3 varieties of type-faces of “New Imperial Record” label name. It means that there were at least 3 separate orders for stickers, possibly for three different batches of rejected Syrenas. There are also records found with a removed “Syrena Record” title and with nothing affixed in its stead. It is possible that the sticker originally was there, but someone removed it later because the remaining trace is slightly pink… The Author imagines the following picture: the printing plant that printed paper labels for “Syrena Record” hired a new linotypist that happened to be negligent of his duties as well as illiterate in the Russian language. As a result, there were printed a large number of paper labels with different kinds of typos and spelling errors that was instantly used in production. Since the factory was located in Warsaw, the natural language of most of the workers was Polish, so faulty paper labels were not immediately discovered, and by the time they were discovered, a huge number of records were already pressed. What to do with them? It was a pity to recycle them – the quality of records was perfect! Also, they had to pay salaries to press operators – it was not their fault! However, it was not possible to sell them too – that would forever spoil the good “Syrena Record” reputation to respectable customers. That is why they found a simple and reliable solution – to sell the records via a third party Company with mandatory affixing of its own sticker. This way the “esprit de corps” was saved and income from sales was received. In reality it was not a secret that “New Imperial Record” records were in fact Syrenas, but the latter was not at risk at all since no one could complain on the quality of records, and the majority of customers did not care about misspellings! Frankly speaking, I would not be surprised if “Syrena” itself created the “New Imperial Record” label and then secretly affixed the stickers regardless of multiple public renounces! In the opinion of many Russian researchers, “Syrena Record” started as piratical company, so such “tricks” were not really a novelty for it. Was it really so? We probably will never know… IF ANYONE HAS ANY PROBLEM WITH THE POSTAL TIME OR THE ITEM AFTER THEY RECEIVE IT PLEASE CONTACT ME BEFORE GOING THROUGH THE RESOLUTION CENTRE AS I ALWAYS SOLVE ANY PROBLEM! ALL PARCELS WILL BE ENSURED! THE ITEM DELIVERY TIME IS FROM 1 TO 2 WEEKS. HAPPY BIDDING AND GOOD LUCK!

Price: 500 USD

Location: Tbilisi

End Time: 2024-08-14T12:09:10.000Z

Shipping Cost: 24 USD

Product Images

1912 RUSSIAN EMPIRE SYRENA NEW IMPERIAL RECORD PASTE OVER LABEL 78RPM 10” RECORD1912 RUSSIAN EMPIRE SYRENA NEW IMPERIAL RECORD PASTE OVER LABEL 78RPM 10” RECORD

Item Specifics

Restocking Fee: No

Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

All returns accepted: Returns Accepted

Item must be returned within: 30 Days

Refund will be given as: Money Back

Artist: “HARMONY ORCHESTRA” UNDER V. VARSHAVSKY

Speed: 78 RPM

Type: Shellac

Format: Record

Record Label: GRAMOPHONE

Language: Russian

Release Title: MEDLEY ON RUSSIAN SONGS

Record Size: 10"

Material: Shellac

Edition: 1st Edition

Recommended

RARE Jewish Judaica Bialik Songs Poems Poetry Book 1912 Russia Russian
RARE Jewish Judaica Bialik Songs Poems Poetry Book 1912 Russia Russian

$124.99

View Details
1912 ЭБ Russia 50 Kopeks Imperial Russia Nicholas II UNC. Toned 1/2 Rouble Y58.2
1912 ЭБ Russia 50 Kopeks Imperial Russia Nicholas II UNC. Toned 1/2 Rouble Y58.2

$89.95

View Details
Coin Silver Kopeck Russia 50 Kopeks 1912 Scarce XF Nikolaus Q1JV
Coin Silver Kopeck Russia 50 Kopeks 1912 Scarce XF Nikolaus Q1JV

$59.00

View Details
Vintage 1782 Russian Copper 5 Kopeck Coin & 1912 Russian 500 Rouble Banknote Lot
Vintage 1782 Russian Copper 5 Kopeck Coin & 1912 Russian 500 Rouble Banknote Lot

$349.99

View Details
RUSSIAN, x 3 CONSECUTIVE 500 Roubles Notes, 1912, P14 VF+ 3 Consecutive Serial
RUSSIAN, x 3 CONSECUTIVE 500 Roubles Notes, 1912, P14 VF+ 3 Consecutive Serial

$30.00

View Details
1912 Russia Silver 50 Kopeks Nikolas Il Rainbow Toned
1912 Russia Silver 50 Kopeks Nikolas Il Rainbow Toned

$152.99

View Details
4 Coins of the Russian Empire  1727, 1736, 1741, 1912 (3)
4 Coins of the Russian Empire 1727, 1736, 1741, 1912 (3)

$39.99

View Details
5 kopeck 1912 SPB Russia Empire copper coin Nickolas II Better Grade Rare Date
5 kopeck 1912 SPB Russia Empire copper coin Nickolas II Better Grade Rare Date

$289.00

View Details
1912 Russia Empire Rouble silver coin NGC AU Nice details
1912 Russia Empire Rouble silver coin NGC AU Nice details

$325.00

View Details
Russia 1 Kopeck 1912 #82534
Russia 1 Kopeck 1912 #82534

$5.00

View Details