Ad
related to: old san francisco music boxesetsy.com has been visited by 1M+ users in the past month
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Mechanical Music Box – Auld Lang Syne; Mechanical Music from Phonogrammarchiv of the Austrian Academy of Sciences; LP vinyl record: "The Concert Regina Music Box and the Symphonium" (1977, Nostalgia Repertoire Records – Sonic Arts Corporation, 665 Harrison Street, San Francisco Ca. 94107, Curator: Leo de Gar Kulka, Record No. RR 4771 Stereo.)
Music Box (1936–1945) Location: 859 O'Farrell Street San Francisco, California ... The Great American Music Hall is a concert hall in San Francisco, California.
"Little Boxes" is a song written and composed by Malvina Reynolds in 1962. The song was first released by her friend, Pete Seeger , in 1963, and became his only charting single in January 1964. The song is a social satire [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] about the development of suburbia and associated conformist middle-class attitudes.
In 1889, Louis Glass and William S. Arnold invented the nickel-in-the-slot phonograph, in San Francisco. [3] This was an Edison Class M Electric Phonograph retrofitted with a device patented under the name of 'Coin Actuated Attachment for Phonograph'. The music was heard via one of four listening tubes. [4]
The Fillmore is a historic music venue in San Francisco, California.. Built in 1912 and originally named the Majestic Hall, it became the Fillmore Auditorium in 1954. [1] It is in Western Addition, on the edge of the Fillmore District and Upper Fillmore neighborhood.
Grimes Poznikov (August 5, 1946 – October 27, 2005), known as "The Human Jukebox," was an American musician and entertainer, a fixture of San Francisco's Fisherman's Wharf in the 1970s and 1980s. He was a street performer , who would wait in a decorated cardboard refrigerator box until a passerby offered him a donation and requested a song.
Old San Francisco is a 1927 American synchronized sound historical drama film starring Dolores Costello and featuring Warner Oland. While the film has no audible dialog, it was released with a synchronized musical score with sound effects using the Vitaphone sound-on-disc process.
The Avalon Ballroom was a music venue in the Polk Gulch neighborhood of San Francisco, California, at 1244 Sutter Street [1] (or 1268 Sutter, [2] depending on the entrance). The space is known as the location of many concerts of the counterculture movement, from around 1966 to 1969. It also had a reopening 34 years later, from 2003 to 2005.
Ad
related to: old san francisco music boxesreviews.chicagotribune.com has been visited by 1M+ users in the past month