{"webUser":null}
Audioboom logo
Menu
Audioboom logo
  • Podcasts
  • Advertisers
  • Creators
  • Help & support
  • Sign up
  • Sign in
{"flashNotices":[]}
Podcasts
Advertisers
Creators
Help & support
Search podcasts
Sign up
Sign in
Podcast logo
Fiona Dunn's Podcast

GramophoneBoo part 1. Playing with parents' wind-up gramophone and 78s on Christmas Eve

Dec 24, 2011, 08:04 PM
- --
- -- 1×
Headliner
See more options
Share
Facebook X
Subscribe
Share
Facebook X
Subscribe
Next
GramophoneBoo part 2. Playing with parents' wind-up gramophone and 78s on Christmas Eve
Top episodes
I'll be educating the sighted tonight @saloire @freakyfwoof
by Fiona Dunn's Podcast
I play Bach Prelude in C on Victorian piano in Canons Ashby drawing room @majadunn @stewartdunn1
by Fiona Dunn's Podcast
Southbank Singing Lift with added entertainment, recorded by @adhodgson
by Fiona Dunn's Podcast
Related episodes
Charles Spicer concludes that after the war, Christie and Conwell-Evans published a limited-run book, None So Blind, detailing their ignored warnings to the government. Though Martin Gilbert later attempted to correct the record, these amateur spies la
by The John Batchelor Show
Charles Spicer recounts how, in December 1934, Ernest Tennant, a businessman scarred by the horrors of the Great War, dined with Adolf Hitler and Joachim von Ribbentrop at the Reich Chancellery. At the time, Ribbentrop was a passionate Anglophile, and Ten
by The John Batchelor Show
From the Archives with Rick Osmon
by Expanded Perspectives
  •   Report this episode
  •   Download audio
  •   QRCode
For podcasters For advertisers For listeners
About us Help & feedback Service status
Blog Investors Strategic review
Terms & conditions Privacy policy Cookie policy
© 2026 Audioboom

Sorry, your browser isn't supported.

We recommend upgrading to the latest Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.

Page load failed

Please check your internet connection and refresh the page. You might also try disabling any ad blockers.

You can visit our support center if you're having problems.