The Wurlitzer 1015 (September/October 1989 | Volume: 40, Issue: 6)

The Wurlitzer 1015

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Authors: Bill Barol

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September/October 1989 | Volume 40, Issue 6

The first coin-operated phonograph was installed in San Francisco’s Palais Royale Saloon on November 23, 1889, which makes the jukebox one hundred years old this year. It’s appropriate that the Wurlitzer 1015—seen in all its glory on the opposite page—was produced at about the midpoint of that century. No jukebox before it was as beautiful, and none since has been as popular.

The 1015 came along at a time when the jukebox was ubiquitous. (Probably West African in origin, the word juke has been linked to slang terms for dancing and partying.) The jukebox had flourished in the 1930s—in the depths of the Depression, at a nickel a play, it was the next best thing to free. By 1940 Americans were dropping five million nickels a day into the nation’s 250,000 jukeboxes, which were located not just in bars and diners but, according to Nation’s Business magazine, “bus stations, beauty parlors, airport waiting rooms, rest rooms, hotel lobbies, passenger liners and excursion boats.” By February 1946 the New York Daily News would grouse: “There is no such thing as a quiet saloon or eatery, these days, because of a loud and garish cabinet that stands in the corner. This is the juke box. It has made every beanery a poor man’s night club.”

Into this setting came the designer Paul Fuller of the Rudolph Wurlitzer Company. A man of modern sensibilities, he had moved Wurlitzer juke-boxes away from the boxy lines of the early 1930s to undulant, streamlined curves, and the rest of the industry had followed. But since May of 1942, like everyone else in the business, he had been chafing under wartime production restrictions. Before the war he had done brilliant things with plastics, culminating in his 1941 Model 850, which spun polarized acetate disks in front of incandescent light bulbs to create a prism effect; in wartime he was limited to glass and wood, old-fashioned materials. He did the best he could, but his wartime Model 42, the “Victory” model, had a stodgy look. It was a step back at just the moment when Fuller most wanted to move forward.

It shouldn’t be surprising, then, that when controls came off in 1946 Fuller came up with the most beautiful juke-box he, or anyone else, had ever designed. With the 1015 Fuller broke away from the Art Nouveau decorative motifs he had used before the war. The 1015’s only decorative traces were clean, austere musical notes, form following function. In all its other particulars the 1015 was purely forward-looking—the perfect machine for a war-weary nation that wanted to dance ahead into the future. The arching side, top, and center tubes were fabricated of formed plastic. The trim was bright chrome and molded plastic, fire-engine red. The New York dealer John Johnston describes the 1015 as the “most animated” jukebox ever made, and indeed, even when it wasn’t playing, the long bubble tubes