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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?).
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?).
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.
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.
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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