Kanazawa Phonograph Museum — Antique Sound Machines
The Kanazawa Phonograph Museum (金沢蓄音器館) houses over 600 antique phonographs, music boxes, and early sound recording devices from the 1900s–1930s, with 150 on display in a beautifully restored Taisho-era building. The collection includes Edison cylinders, Victor talking machines, German gramophones, Swiss music boxes, and rare Japanese-made phonographs. The museum emphasizes functional preservation — many machines are playable and staff conduct three daily listening demonstrations (11:00, 14:00, 16:00) where visitors hear 1920s jazz, opera, and enka played on original 78rpm shellac records through massive horn speakers.
The museum's curator explains each machine's mechanics, demonstrates winding the spring motors, changing steel needles (which wear out after a single play), and selecting playback speed. The sound quality is surprisingly rich — the large acoustic horns amplify vibrations from the needle without electricity, producing warm, analog tones impossible to replicate digitally. The museum also displays beautifully crafted music boxes, player pianos, and early electric phonographs. The collection represents the obsession of founder Yamamoto Yasuo, who spent 40 years acquiring these machines. His passion for mechanical music's golden age is palpable throughout the museum.
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