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and Joe Schenck (born Joseph Thuma Schenck, c. 1891 - June 28, 1930), tenor.
The duo sang and did comedy routeens. They were Vaudeville stars, appeared in the Ziegfeld Follies, and made numberous phonograph recordsHeaven and Hell by Black Sabbath is an example, showing the South Korean version of the 33 rpm record from 1980 or 1983. A gramophone record or phonograph record (often simply record is an analogue sound recording medium: a flat disc rotating at a constan for the EmersonEmerson Records was a record label active in the United States of America from 1916 to 1928. Emerson was founded by Victor H. Emerson, who had worked for Columbia Records since the 1890s. In 1916 he started his namesake company, producing 7 inch gramophon, VictorThe Victor Talking Machine Company ( 1901 1929) was a United States corporation, the leading American producer of phonographs and phonograph records and one of the leading phonograph companies in the world at the time. The company was incorporated in Camd, and ColumbiaColumbia Records is the oldest continually used brand name in recorded sound, dating back to 1888. 1925 Columbia was originally the local company distributing and selling Edison phonographs and phonograph cylinders in Washington, D. Maryland and Delaware. record companies.
They also did radioFor other uses see: radio (disambiguation Radio is a technology that allows the transmission of signals by modulation of electromagnetic waves with frequencies below those of light. Radio waves Radio waves are a form of electromagnetic radiation, and are shows, and in the late 1920s appeared in some sound filmA sound film (or talkie is a motion picture with synchronized sound as opposed to a silent movie. Although not the first, the most famous of the early talkies was The Jazz Singer in 1927. In the early years after introduction of sound, sound films were cas.