Zonophone
Zonophone, early on also rendered as
Zon-O-Phone was a
record label founded in
1899 in
Camden, New Jersey by Frank Seaman. The Zonophone name was not that of the company, but was applied to the records and machines sold by Seaman from 1899-1900 to 1903.
Seaman had worked for
Emile Berliner's
Berliner Gramophone. Seaman decided to start his own company to produce
disc records and disc
phonographs. Seaman's "Zon-O-Phone" records design and technology were shamelessly stolen from Berliner, and the machines similarly copied from the products of
Eldridge R. Johnson's
Consolidated Talking Machine Company. Astoundingly, Seaman then sued Berliner and Johnson for violating
his technology! With the help of
lawyer Phillip Mauro, Seaman arranged for an alliance with
Columbia Records (then manufacturing only
cylinder records and machines), arguing that the
patents held by Columbia concerning cylinders applied to any type of recording where a
stylus vibrated in a groove, and that Zon-O-Phone would pay royalties if Columbia helped him drive Berliner out of business. In
1900 Seaman and Mauro succeeded in getting a
judge to file an injunction that Berliner and Johnson stop making their products.
Johnson and Berliner counter-sued, and the following year emerged victorious in court—prompting the name of their new combined company,
The Victor.
Further legal actions dragged on until
1903, when all of the
United States and
Latin American assets of Zon-O-Phone were turned over to Victor, and the
Europe and
British Commonwealth assets to the
Gramophone & Typewriter Company (which was to become
HMV).
Victor Talking Machine continued use of the "Zonophone" name to market cheaper records which for whatever reason were not of the technical standard of the Victor label until retiring the label in the U.S. in
1910.
In the
United Kingdom and the Commonwealth, The Gramophone Company (later
EMI) continued to use the "Zonophone" label through 1931. When HMV and Columbia(UK) merged to form Electrical and Musical Industries, Ltd. (EMI), the lower-priced labels of the two firms were merged also as
Regal Zonophone, which continued until c. 1949. Since EMI owned the rights to the Zonophone name.
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List of record labels