A Saturday afternoon in December 1958.
The local record department was packed as shoppers battled to buy the latest hits.
I was there, too, with a friend of mine who was asking if he could listen to a record fast climbing the hit parade – a rockin’ little number by a young lad known as “The Kilted Choirboy.” His real name was Jackie Dennis and his hit song was called The Purple People Eater, which had been a hit in the States for a disc jockey known as Sheb Wooley.
The girl behind the counter looked the record out (it was one of the old and fondly remembered “seventy-eights”), gave it to him and pointed us towards a booth at the side of the shop.
We went in, put it on the turntable and listened, not just once but several times.
That was the way of it in those days. And they trusted you to take it back once you’d finished even if you didn’t want to buy it. He did, though, and so did I and it sticks in the memory still for it was the first record I ever bought.
How times have changed.
At that time there was no popular music radio station (Radio One did not come until the “pirate” radio stations were driven off-air in the mid-Sixties) and to hear the music you liked meant either tuning into Radio Luxembourg every evening, the trouble being that it faded all the time, or if you were lucky hearing something worthwhile, on Family Favourites or Housewives’ Choice.
For many people in the 1950s, particularly in the earlier part of the decade, having something to play records on was a sought after item.
At one time I had a treasured wind-up player, a hefty machine with a pick-up that was extremely heavy and you needed a supply of steel needles to make it work.
But things started to move fast as the fifties progressed. Enter the Dansette.
This was probably the most popular record player of all, introduced in 1950-51 at a cost of 33 guineas (think £800 today!). It was fairly portable, although rather heavy and had four speeds – 16rpm, 33, 45 and 78.
Not only that. Joy of joy, you could actually stack your records on a spindle which dropped the next one once the disc which had been playing ended.
Of course, if you didn’t have the money to buy a record player and providing you lived in East Yorkshire you could always give Teledisc a call. This was the unique Hull Corporation Telephones service on which a hit of the week was played which led to many a household phone being tied up for ages, not to mention groups of teenagers gathered round phone boxes to listen in.
All very old fashioned by today’s standards, but those were days still fondly remembered by many.
What fun they were.
- FiftiesFan
*Remember buying your first record? Or what it was? We welcome your memories.