Philips DS3800W/10 パンフレット

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A legend of the recording industry
Philips has a strong heritage in recording which began with the acquisition 
of Hollandsche Decca Distributie (HDD), the exclusive Dutch distributor 
of Decca Records in 1942. Whilst Philips had produced gramophones for 
some time, the management wanted to ensure that the company also had 
an interest in recording and record manufacture and so in 1950 Philips 
Phonografische Industrie (PPI) was formed.
PPI played an important role in introducing the long-playing vinyl (LP) 
record to Europe and it had a worldwide distribution deal with Mercury 
Records. With the goal of becoming the largest record company in 
Europe, PPI focused on alliances, and in 1962 merged with Deutsche 
Grammophone Gesellschaft (DGG), famed for its classical repertoire and 
owner of Polydor Records.
By 1972, the merged company GPG would reinvent itself as PolyGram 
and Polydor Records in the US, acquiring a range of famous American 
and British labels such as MGM Records, Verve, Casablanca, Pickwick and 
Decca. The height of Polygram’s success was during the disco craze of 
the 1970s, thanks to multi-million selling LPs and 45s from artists such as 
The Bee Gees, Donna Summer, The Village People, Kool & the Gang and 
soundtracks for blockbuster films Grease and Saturday Night Fever.
For a short while it was the world’s biggest record company bolstered by 
acquisitions of other famous labels such as Motown, Def Jam and Polar, 
which held rights to the ABBA catalogue. Sadly, the company’s fortunes 
dwindled and it was sold to Seagram in 1998 to become Universal Music.
It survives to this day thanks to the reissue of music under the Polydor 
Records label. 
Speech by Dutch Queen Wihelmina and Princess Juliana via a Philips short-wave transmitter, 1927.
Philips Phonografische Industrie (PPI) and gramophone records, 1950s.
The radio goes global
A radio valve featuring five electrodes - the pentode - was the 
next major development by Philips, introduced in 1927. It was 
an invention which was to stay at the forefront of electronics for 
a number of years - this was an electron tube with high output 
power which could be controlled in such a way as to minimize 
signal distortion - a step towards the purest sound Philips has 
always strived for.
In 1927 the Dutch Queen Wilhelmina and Princess Juliana were 
able to speak to their compatriots in the East and West Indies 
via a Philips short-wave transmitter which had been set up in a 
laboratory. The first ever of its kind, it was greeted with national 
excitement. Encouraged by this, Philips set up a world broadcasting 
service - the N.V. Philips Omroep Holland-Indie.
To demonstrate the sensation of radio sound on a large scale, 
Philips set up amplifiers with a large number of loudspeakers at 
public events. What became known as the ‘Voice of the Giant’ 
caused a tremendous stir.
Philips continued to enrich the everyday lives of people when it 
developed and brought to market a small domestic radio set in 
1928. This was released at the same time as the most powerful 
transmitter in the world, also built by Philips. These radio sets would 
soon be found in homes all around the world, as Philips brought 
quality sound to the masses. The one millionth Philips radio set was 
produced in 1932 and the hundred millionth radio valve, produced 
in 1933, meant Philips was now Europe’s biggest manufacturer of 
radio valves, and the world leader in radio sets.