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Reply to: The Sound Of Song

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Previously on "The Sound Of Song"

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  • darmstadt
    replied
    Originally posted by TykeMerc View Post
    Having worked with mainframes in my distant past and spent more than a few hours inside their tape drives it's clear some serious engineering time went into that technology too (related possibly?).
    Mmmm, tape cleaner fluid

    Leave a comment:


  • TykeMerc
    replied
    Originally posted by zeitghost
    What's impressed me is the speed at which mag tape went from single track mono 1/4" to 24 tracks on 2" tape, then 48 tracks on synched recorders.
    Classic case of letting a bunch of talented engineers loose with a new technology and a mandate to see what they can come up with. The music business has innovated a fair bit, I think it's all the enthusiasts and whizzbang odd ideas that go with the creative natures.
    Having worked with mainframes in my distant past and spent more than a few hours inside their tape drives it's clear some serious engineering time went into that technology too (related possibly?).

    Leave a comment:


  • DannyF1966
    replied
    I missed this series but knowing BBC4 it'll be repeated soon. Or I could get with the times and watch it on iPlayer on my phone while piggybacking on the totally open wireless internet of the company just down the corridor.

    Leave a comment:


  • NotAllThere
    replied
    I've been watching it. Great stuff. I loved the story of Bruce Springsteen's "Nebraska". It's interesting that some bands (Nirvana) sound better when just recorded, and others need to be produced to get a good sound.

    Leave a comment:


  • TestMangler
    started a topic The Sound Of Song

    The Sound Of Song

    BBC Four, last three weeks. Anyone watch it ?

    Catalogued the history of recorded music from the beginning too recent(ish) times.

    Interesting stuff. Didn't realise multi track tape was so 'recent' and magnetic tape in general would have taken a lot longer of come about but for Bing Crosby !

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