Finding Aid for the Play-Rite Music Rolls collection 1010
Jacqueline Morin
USC Libraries Music Library
2011
Doheny Memorial Library, G-24
3550 Trousdale Parkway
Los Angeles, California 90089-1822
music@usc.edu
Contributing Institution:
USC Libraries Music Library
Title: Play-Rite Music Rolls collection
Creator:
Play-Rite Music Rolls Company
Identifier/Call Number: 1010
Physical Description:
1 Linear Feet
1 banker's box containing three piano roll boxes
Date: 1979, 1982
Abstract: Piano rolls are spools of perforated paper (or thin film) programmed with music and designed to be played on a mechanically-operated
piano, more commonly called a player piano. Player pianos as popular entertainment reached their heyday in the 1920s, although
both player pianos and piano rolls can be found today-- and at least one company, QRS Music, continues to manufacture music
rolls. The two music rolls in this small collection were both manufactured by Play-Rite Music Rolls, Inc. in the late 1970s
and early 1980s, although the songs themselves date back to the 1930s.
Language of Material:
English
.
Container: 1
The collection consists of two music rolls of ten songs each, plus two plastic end pieces for a music roll. One of the music
rolls is called "Gene Autry Special" and the ten songs are those presumably sung by Autry, including his signature tune "Back
in the Saddle Again," but also "Lara's Theme" from "Dr. Zhivago".
The other music roll is titled "Vampy Tunes" and consists of one-steps, foxtrots, ragtime songs, waltzes, and two-steps such
as "Cotton Pickers' Picnic Day" and "When the Kaiser Does the Goose Step to a Good Old American Rag."
A player piano is a mechanically operated piano, especially a pedal-operated or motor-driven piano using pneumatic suction
to move the keys in correspondence to the perforations on a turning piano roll. [American Heritage Dictionary].
The earliest known player pianos date back to the 1500s when piano builder Samuel Bidermann of Augsburg, Germany equipped
three spinets (small, upright pianos) with pinned barrels similar to those in music boxes during his lifetime from 1540 to
1622. However, it wasn't until the end of the 19th century that interest in self-playing pianos was revived. In the early
1900s, standardization of the paper rolls created an industry for the manufacture of player pianos.
By the early 1920s, the player piano had reached its peak and at one point more than half of all pianos being made in America
contained a player unit. However, advances in radio technology as well as electrical recording systems such as amplification
for 78 rpm records, contributed to the decline of the player piano's popularity. When the stock market crashed in 1929, only
a few player piano companies were able to continue, many through consolidation of smaller companies.
In the 1950s and 1960s, a number of collectors began to rescue player pianos and piano rolls and to form societies dedicated
to peserving all forms of mechanical music. By the 1960s, production of player pianos had been revived as well as the rebuilding
of original instruments which continues today.
A piano roll itself consists of a continuous sheet of paper rolled onto a spool, though modern rolls are often made of thin
plastic or polyester film. The music to be played is programmed onto the paper by means of perforations. The spool fits
into the player piano spool box, and the instrument's reading mechanism, the tracker bar, reads these as the roll undwinds.
After a roll is played, it is necessary for it to be rewound before it can be played again. As of 2011, QRS Music claims
to be the only manufacturer of music rolls in the world today with over 5,000 master recordings and over 45,000 music rolls.
COLLECTION STORED OFF-SITE. Advance notice required for access. Consult finding aid for additional information.
Researchers are reminded of the copyright restrictions imposed by publishers on reusing published works in whole or in part.
It is the responsibility of researchers to acquire permission from publishers when reusing such materials. The copyright
to unpublished materials belongs to the heirs of the writers. Permission to publish, quote, or reproduce must be secured
from the repository and the copyright holder.
Finding aid description and metadata are licensed under an Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license.
[Identification of item], Play-Rite Music Rolls collection, Collection no. 1010, Music Library, USC Libraries, University
of Southern California.
This collection was a gift to USC's Music Library from the Autry Archives in 2010.
Other materials in USC's Special Collections related to the Piano Rolls collection include:
Ampico collection of piano rolls (0028)
Simonton (Richard) Collection of Welte system-recorded piano rolls (0176)
Other Repositories:
UCLA Ethnomusicology Archive: Berkman Collection of Spanish, Greek, Polish, Czech, Italian, Hungarian, and German piano
rolls, 1910-1930
UCLA Performing Arts Special Collections: Ampico Player Piano Rolls Collection
The dates on the piano rolls refer to copyright dates from Play-Rite Music Rolls, Inc. rather than the original recording
dates of the music.
Subjects and Indexing Terms
Player piano rolls
Popular music -- United States -- Archival resources
Autry, Gene -- Archives
Gene Autry Special 1979
Music roll by Play-Rite Music Rolls, Inc. Songs include:
1. Back in the Saddle Again.
2. That Silver Haired Daddy of Mine.
3. Red Sails in the Sunset.
4. Mexicali Rose.
5. Harbor Lights.
6. South of the Border.
7. Tumbling Tumbleweeds.
8. Somewhere My Love (Lara's Theme from Dr. Zhivago)
9. Here Comes Santa Claus.
10. Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer.
Vampy Tunes 1982
Music roll by Play-Rite Music Rolls, Inc. Songs include:
1. I'm All Alone Tonight, One-Step.
2. Cotton Picker's Picnic Day, Fox Trot.
3. Nena Waltz.
4. General Pershing, March Two-Step.
5. When the Kaiser Does the Goose Step to a Good Old American Rag, Rag.
6. Water Nymph, One-Step.
7. Texas Never Seemed So Far Away, Rag.
8. Clarinet Blues.
9. Texas Foxtrot.
10. The Aero Travelers, Waltz.