Box 6
Contains 22 Collections and/or Records:
Side and Side B: NBC Symphony Orchestra, V-Disc album, circa October 1943 - May 1949
V-Disc was a record label of the U.S. military from October 1943 - May 1949, during World War II and the immediate postwar period. The label was intended to boost the morale of United States military personnel overseas, through special arrangements between the military and private record companies. Each 12-inch disc could hold six and a half minutes of music at 78 rpm.
Side A: Duke Ellington and his Orchestra; Side B: Randy Brooks and his Orchestra, V-Disc album, circa October 1943 - May 1949
V-Disc was a record label of the U.S. military from October 1943 - May 1949, during World War II and the immediate postwar period. The label was intended to boost the morale of United States military personnel overseas, through special arrangements between the military and private record companies. Each 12-inch disc could hold six and a half minutes of music at 78 rpm.
Side A: Benny Goodman Sextet; Side B: Woody Herman and his Orchestra, V-Disc album, circa October 1943 - May 1949
V-Disc was a record label of the U.S. military from October 1943 - May 1949, during World War II and the immediate postwar period. The label was intended to boost the morale of United States military personnel overseas, through special arrangements between the military and private record companies. Each 12-inch disc could hold six and a half minutes of music at 78 rpm.
Side A and Side B: Duke Ellington and his Orchestra, V-Disc album, circa October 1943 - May 1949
V-Disc was a record label of the U.S. military from October 1943 - May 1949, during World War II and the immediate postwar period. The label was intended to boost the morale of United States military personnel overseas, through special arrangements between the military and private record companies. Each 12-inch disc could hold six and a half minutes of music at 78 rpm.
Side A: Marie Greene and her V-Disc Merry Men; Side B: Helen Forrest and Dick Haymes, V-Disc album, circa October 1943 - May 1949
V-Disc was a record label of the U.S. military from October 1943 - May 1949, during World War II and the immediate postwar period. The label was intended to boost the morale of United States military personnel overseas, through special arrangements between the military and private record companies. Each 12-inch disc could hold six and a half minutes of music at 78 rpm.
Side A: Duke Ellington and his Orchestra; Side B: Count Basie and his Orchestra, V-Disc album, circa October 1943 - May 1949
V-Disc was a record label of the U.S. military from October 1943 - May 1949, during World War II and the immediate postwar period. The label was intended to boost the morale of United States military personnel overseas, through special arrangements between the military and private record companies. Each 12-inch disc could hold six and a half minutes of music at 78 rpm.
Side A: Red Norvo and his Sky Painters; Side B: Yank Lawson and his Dixieland Jazz Band, V-Disc album, circa October 1943 - May 1949
V-Disc was a record label of the U.S. military from October 1943 - May 1949, during World War II and the immediate postwar period. The label was intended to boost the morale of United States military personnel overseas, through special arrangements between the military and private record companies. Each 12-inch disc could hold six and a half minutes of music at 78 rpm.
Side A: Buddy Rich and his V-Disc Speed Demons; Side B: Bill Stegmeyer and his Hot Eight, V-Disc album, circa October 1943 - May 1949
V-Disc was a record label of the U.S. military from October 1943 - May 1949, during World War II and the immediate postwar period. The label was intended to boost the morale of United States military personnel overseas, through special arrangements between the military and private record companies. Each 12-inch disc could hold six and a half minutes of music at 78 rpm.
Side A: Igor Stravinsky Conducting the NY Philharmonic; Side B: Wanda Landa Landovska, V-Disc album, circa October 1943 - May 1949
V-Disc was a record label of the U.S. military from October 1943 - May 1949, during World War II and the immediate postwar period. The label was intended to boost the morale of United States military personnel overseas, through special arrangements between the military and private record companies. Each 12-inch disc could hold six and a half minutes of music at 78 rpm.
Side A and Side B: CBS Symphony Orchestra, V-Disc album, circa October 1943 - May 1949
V-Disc was a record label of the U.S. military from October 1943 - May 1949, during World War II and the immediate postwar period. The label was intended to boost the morale of United States military personnel overseas, through special arrangements between the military and private record companies. Each 12-inch disc could hold six and a half minutes of music at 78 rpm.