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Life After Brown
On this Day
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<blockquote data-quote="texan" data-source="post: 952464" data-attributes="member: 38206"><p><strong>On this day, 18 March 1911, Irving Berlin copyrights the biggest pop song of the early 20th century.</strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong>A century ago, even before the phonograph had become a common household item, there was already a burgeoning music </strong></p><p><strong>industry in the United States based not on the sale of recorded musical performances, but on the sale of sheet music. </strong></p><p><strong>It was in the medium of printed paper, and not grooved lacquer or vinyl discs, that songs gained popularity in the first </strong></p><p><strong>two decades of the 20th century, and no song gained greater popularity in that era than </strong></p><p><strong>Irving Berlin's "Alexander's Ragtime Band." Copyrighted on March 18, 1911.</strong></p><p>[media=youtube]Bph25Q5h1fo[/media]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="texan, post: 952464, member: 38206"] [B]On this day, 18 March 1911, Irving Berlin copyrights the biggest pop song of the early 20th century. A century ago, even before the phonograph had become a common household item, there was already a burgeoning music industry in the United States based not on the sale of recorded musical performances, but on the sale of sheet music. It was in the medium of printed paper, and not grooved lacquer or vinyl discs, that songs gained popularity in the first two decades of the 20th century, and no song gained greater popularity in that era than Irving Berlin's "Alexander's Ragtime Band." Copyrighted on March 18, 1911.[/B] [media=youtube]Bph25Q5h1fo[/media] [B][/B] [/QUOTE]
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