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  2. Jukebox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jukebox

    Coin-operated music boxes and player pianos were the first forms of automated coin-operated musical devices. These devices used paper rolls, metal disks, or metal cylinders to play a musical selection on an actual instrument, or on several actual instruments, enclosed within the device.

  3. Wurlitzer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wurlitzer

    Wurlitzer, starting around 1900 until circa 1935 produced nickelodeon pianos, or coin pianos, which are electrically operated player pianos that take coins to operate, like a jukebox. The company produced various models of nickelodeons, such as the early Wurlitzer Mandolin Quartette – Wurlitzer's alternative to the Regina Sublima Piano.

  4. Musée Mécanique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musée_Mécanique

    The museum has a collection of over 300 [2] mechanical games and amusement devices including music boxes, coin-operated fortune tellers, Mutoscopes, [3] video games, love testers, player pianos, peep shows, photo booths, dioramas, and pinball machines. [1] [2] It displays about 200 of them at their current location. [2]

  5. Seeburg Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seeburg_Corporation

    1918 Seeburg Orchestrion, "Style G" used a 10-song music roll and played multiple wind, string, and percussion instruments. Automated musical equipment, such as coin-operated phonographs and orchestrions, was manufactured under the J.P. Seeburg and Company name for most of its early years. Until 1956, the company was family-owned.

  6. Rock-Ola - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rock-Ola

    Rock-Ola Capri II from 1965. The Rock-Ola Manufacturing Corporation is an American developer and manufacturer of juke boxes and related machinery. It was founded in 1927 by Coin-Op pioneer David Cullen Rockola to manufacture slot machines, scales, and pinball machines.

  7. Talk:Music box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Music_box

    Collectors prize surviving music boxes from the 19th century and the early 20th century as well as new music boxes being made today in several countries (see "Evolving Box Production", below). Inexpensive, small windup music box movements (including the cylinder and comb and the spring) that add a bit of music to mass-produced jewellery boxes ...