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Seeburg Corp., J. P.; Chicago, IL

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Nome: Seeburg Corp., J. P.; Chicago, IL    (USA)  
Abbreviazione: seeburg
Prodotti: Brand
Riassunto:

J. P. Seeburg Corporation
1500 N. Dayton St., Chicago 22, Illinois (1947)

Manufacturer of pianos, orchestrions, coin-op phonographs and later jukeboxes and background music systems e.g. for elevators.

Seeburg also had their own tube brand.

Fondata: 1902
Storia:

Born in Sweden in 1871, Justice P. Seeburg (Sjöberg) came to the United States at the age of 16. He settled in Chicago and worked in the piano industry as a mechanic and supervisor. In 1902, J.P. Seeburg started his own manufacturing company using his own name. The J.P. Seeburg Piano Co. soon became the premier maker of Orchestrions in the United States. These automatic pianos had several instruments inside that could sound like a complete band. Seeburg continued with this line of instruments until 1927 when he discontinued the manufacturing of pianos and retooled for making the new coin-operated phonograph.

Seeburg was one of the first manufacturers of a multi-select jukebox with the introduction of the "Audiophone" in 1928. This wide-body, eight-selection box had pneumatic control valves making it half nickelodeon and half phonograph. This model was a reasonable success, but sales never reached huge numbers. By the 1930s other manufacturers had entered the market and were actually selling more jukeboxes than Seeburg. The next model, the Selectophone, was an engineering disaster. Warped spindles made operators mad and this mistake almost put the company under. When J.P. Seeburg entered his 60s in the late 1930s he turned the business over to his son Noel. He was a very sharp businessman and reorganized the company to compete more effectively with Wurlitzer and Rock-Ola. From 1940 until World War II, Seeburg produced some very reasonable and glitzy jukeboxes and did quite well.

But it was the year 1949 that would prove to be the year Seeburg would change the face of jukebox history when it engineered a mechanism that could play both sides of 50 records, a true 100-select jukebox (Peggy Lee with M100A). This mechaniam was so reliable that it nearly put all other manufacturers out of business. In 1950 Seeburg introduced the M100B, the first jukebox to play 45 rpm records. During the 1950s Seeburg enjoyed a dominant place in jukebox production, and in 1955 introduced the V-200, the first 200-select jukebox.

The business was family-owned until 1956 when a group headed by Mr. Delbert Colman called Fort Pitt Industries took over. Soon Seeburg entered the vending machine business (cigarettes, coffee, drinks etc). This culiminated in the take-over of the Bally Company in 1961.

The Seeburg 1000 Background Music System BMS1 was introduced in 1959. It used special non-standard 9" vinyl records with a 2" center hole. The records were commonly marked "Property of Seeburg Music Library Inc."

Also in 1961, the Qualitone Co. of Minneapolis was acquired, a manufacturer of hearing aids and specialized electronics.T the following years other vending machine / coin-op / musical instruments businesses were successively bought out, taken over or incorporated (eg. Williams, Kinsman, Cavalier, DuGrenier, United Mfg. Co. etc.).

In 1979, Seeburg Phonograph Division was spun off but had to close the same year. Later Stern Electronics aquired all of the Seeburg production stock and produced Stern/Seeburg jukeboxes. A few more attempts to make use of the Seeburg brand were undertaken in the 1990s and 2000s, but none were long-lasting.


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Ulteriori particolari per questo produttore inviate dai soci:

Scanned from the Radio Retailing March 1946 page 157.tbn_seeburg_prom_mar46_rr.jpg
Scanned from the Radio Retailing April 1946 page 141.tbn_seeburg_prom_rr_apr46_p141.jpg
Scanned from the Radio Retailing May 1946 page 169.tbn_seeburg_prom_rr_may46_p169.jpg
Scanned from the Radio Retailing August 1946 page 145.tbn_rr_aug46_p145.jpg
Scanned from the Radio Retailing September 1946 page 169.tbn_rr_sep46_p169.jpg
Scanned from the Radio & Television Retailing March 1947 page 197.tbn_rr_mar47_p197.jpg
Scanned from the Radio & Television Retailing June 1947 page 165.tbn_rr_jun47_p165.jpg
Scanned from the Radio & Television Retailing July 1947 page 129.tbn_rr_jul47_p129.jpg

  

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