110. Today in 1920s Turkey: 6 September 1928 (Narrowly Avoiding the Great Gramophone War of 1928)

Yasemin Gencer
4 min readSep 6, 2018
Illustration and snippet, Babacan, 6 September 1928, no. 16, page 4.

Türkçe
Mahalle arasındaki gramofonlardan yaka silkmeyen yok
— Hey komşu, sabah demez akşam demez, gece demez bu zırıltıyı öttürür durursun. Gece uykusuz kaldığıma mı bakayım, sabah işe geç kalıp ziyan ettiğime mi? Ya sesi kesersin, yahud bir gramofon da ben alacağım, sen dinlenmeye çekildiğin zaman koyuverip sana rahat yüzü vermeyeceğim. İşte bu.

English
Everybody is fed up with (all) the gramophones in the neighborhoods
— Hey neighbor, you keep blasting this noise morning, night, and evening alike. Should I be concerned about my sleepless nights or the fact that I am wasting away, becoming late for work in the morning? Either you cut the racket or I’m going to get myself a gramophone and when you withdraw for rest I will turn mine on and not let you relax. That’s it.

Illustration and snippet, Babacan, 6 September 1928, no. 16, page 4.

Comments:
Long before the age of personalized music consumption, streaming services, smartphones, earbuds, headphones, mp3 players, walkmen and discmen, artificial audio entertainment was enjoyed with phonographs (more popularly known as gramophones, although this is technically a brand name). While the phonograph brought pre-recorded music into the home, making this form of recreational activity available in the absence of skilled musicians, it also made the same music “available” to an otherwise captive audience — in this case, neighbors.

Unlike sight or even smell, sound is a difficult sense to effectively obstruct without inconveniencing oneself. Frustrations rising from this new gadget are such that they have made it to the pages of popular magazines. In fact, just like real life, upon surveying Turkey’s selection of publications from the 1920s we are faced with an entire spread of different news and attitudes regarding this new, relatively alien device. Today in 1920s Turkey has covered several examples of phonograph-related materials including an advertisement for His Master’s Voice Gramophones and a news snippet about the arrival of gramophones in Turkey’s villages. These two examples, along with the present one collectively provide the impression that phonographs were ubiquitous at this time: being advertised for, sold, purchased, and certainly “played” to their fullest… and not only in big cities like Istanbul, but nationwide, although, probably to a lesser degree in rural areas. (Incidentally, the second impression these examples provide is the rather obvious fact that Turks really enjoy music…)

But technology comes at a cost beyond the price tag and journalists are quick to point out the negative side effect in their publications. Often such complaints appear to be the result of an editor, writer, or cartoonist reacting to their own direct or indirect relationship to said technology. For instance, so intense and realistic is the language of the above “rant” one cannot help but imagine that the person who articulated those words truly felt that way about his neighbor’s music obsession. What could start as a single neighbor’s misfortune (i.e. being kept up all night with second-hand music) can double as an impromptu public service announcement. In the case of the phonograph, one man’s right to listen to music may infringe upon another’s right to peace and quiet.

Modern transportation vehicles such as automobiles and trolleys also proved to bear “hidden costs” such as frequent, violent traffic fatalities. An example of a more formal announcement advising pedestrians to use the sidewalks to avoid getting hit by fast-moving traffic can be viewed here. Whether it’s automobiles or gramophones, new technologies have the potential to disrupt life in unexpected and sometimes unfortunate ways. Blurbs such as these serve to raise public awareness of the new and changing boundaries involved in peacefully coexisting with others in a modern society.

Entire page, Babacan, 6 September 1928, no. 16, page 4. Atatürk Library, Istanbul.

This article has been updated and modified from its first iteration published Steemit on 6 September 2017. For the original version see:
110. Today in 1920s Turkey: 6 September 1928 (Narrowly Avoiding the Great Gramophone War of 1928)

Originally published at https://steemit.com on September 6, 2018.

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Yasemin Gencer

I am an independent scholar of Islamic art and civilization specializing in the history of Ottoman and modern Turkish art and print culture.