Gramophone
A gramophone, or phonograph, was a device typically associated with 20th century Earth. It used a needle to play sounds recorded onto vinyl discs. It was most often used for the playing of music.
Individual discs could become scratched, which would result in the needle getting "stuck in the groove", resulting in short sections of a song being played over and over again in a loop. At least one of the Doctor's favourite records, "In a Dream," had a definite scratch in it, a matter of concern for both the Seventh and Eighth Doctors. (TV: Doctor Who)
Isobel Watkins bought a gramophone from Portobello Road. She played "Teddy Bears' Picnic" on it for Zoe Heriot but, as the Second Doctor and Jamie McCrimmon were possibly in trouble, Zoe was distracted and barely listened. (TV: The Invasion)
The First Monk used a gramophone to fake the presence of a religious order in the deserted monastery that served as his base of operations. (TV: The Time Meddler)
A gramophone was used during the Fifth Doctor's visit to Cranleigh Hall in 1925. (TV: Black Orchid)
The Seventh Doctor, at least while travelling with Benny, had an extensive collection of vinyl records for use on his console room gramophone. (PROSE: Eternity Weeps)
Both the seventh and eighth incarnations of the Doctor seemed to prefer listening to music reproduced on an early 20th century gramophone, as one had a prominent place within their console room around the time of the Seventh Doctor's regeneration. (TV: Doctor Who) This gramophone was eventually relegated to being in the drawing room by the time of the Eleventh Doctor. (GAME: TARDIS)
De Florres had a gramophone on which he plays German music, such as when he played Ride of the Valkyries on 1988. (TV: Silver Nemesis)
Dr Jeremiah O'Kane listened to "Daisy Bell" on his gramophone at Hawthorne. (HOMEVID: The Zero Imperative)
Graham O'Brien owned a record player. (PROSE: Time Lapse)
In the meadow in which Iris Wildthyme hosted a party, she danced to a song by James Last on a gramophone. (PROSE: The Party in Room Four)
On the Inferno Earth acoustic gramophones, driven by a powerful spring, remained popular into the late 1960s despite the widespread adoption of audio cassettes. The load-shedding and brownouts which plagued Britain at the time meant electrically powered music systems could be unreliable. (PROSE: I, Alastair)