Music - stupid!
used radio and records
There were live concerts, records albums and radio's.
Tapes Radio Records 8 tracks
Swing and Big Band Jazz was the POPular music of the day.. ( Benny Goodman, Tommy Dorsey, etc )
no you can be a regular person to listen
Television sets were not generally available until the late 1940s so nearly all music was either broadcast on radio or sold on records. Records were large, heavy plastic discs that turned at 78 rpm so you could only listen to 3 minutes of music at a time, hence the length of the typical pop song. In the early 1940s many people also attended live performances where singers and bands would play in movie theaters, concert halls, and dance ballrooms. WW2 restrictions on travel contributed to the demise of live performances; attendance also fell due to the number of people serving in the military and then trying to raise families postwar, as well as increased costs of staging live shows. By 1948 TV sets were becoming available, and the first long-playing vinyl records and FM radios started to be sold, so music listening started to become more what we know today.
he enjoys 1940s German classical music
No, records were not required until the 1968 Gun Control Act.
swagger
people
Everyone listened to music on the radio. People also listened to music on vinyl records. You can still buy vinyls today.
Records are the oldest means of recording music, then reels of tape, then cartridges of tape, then cassettes of tape. The very first records were tubes coated in wax, about the size of the tube in a roll of toilet paper. They were replaced by flat records.