Forums :: Resources :: Features :: Photo Gallery :: Vintage Radio Shows :: Archives :: Books
Support This Site: The Souvenir Shop :: Contributors :: Advertise


It is currently May Mon 20, 2013 12:17 am


All times are UTC [ DST ]



Post New Topic Post Reply  [ 71 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1, 2, 3, 4  Next
Author Message
 Post subject: Re: Records are mainstream again
PostPosted: Apr Sat 21, 2012 1:48 am 
Member

Joined: Aug Sat 01, 2009 2:23 pm
Posts: 463
troydog wrote:
I can not wait for the 8 track to make a come back heck even the 4 track would be so cool. But wonder did they scrap the machines that made them back in the day.

I still only by my music on lp's or 45's. I never owned a cd player in my life. I been around them and did not care for it at all.


I wouldn't hold my breath on the 8 track thing.

_________________
John Stone
Speaker Nerd-German Radio Fan


Top
 Profile  
 
 Post subject: Re: Records are mainstream again
PostPosted: Apr Sat 21, 2012 3:02 am 
Member
User avatar

Joined: Mar Mon 19, 2012 8:20 pm
Posts: 254
Location: Denver, Colorado
jmsent wrote:
troydog wrote:
I can not wait for the 8 track to make a come back heck even the 4 track would be so cool. But wonder did they scrap the machines that made them back in the day.

I still only by my music on lp's or 45's. I never owned a cd player in my life. I been around them and did not care for it at all.


I wouldn't hold my breath on the 8 track thing.


Roflmao! I still listen to 8 tracks and when they are really worn out or my 8 track player eats them...I throw them on top of my china cabinet...pull the tape out and stream it around the living room as a decorative memorial for a couple of days. :shock:

_________________
LOVE & LIGHT!
*MaryAntoinette*

You can take the Girl out of Brooklyn...


Top
 Profile  
 
 Post subject: Re: Records are mainstream again
PostPosted: Apr Sat 21, 2012 4:53 am 
Member

Joined: May Sat 14, 2011 5:42 am
Posts: 2566
Location: Ft Worth TX
Best vinyl I own: Waiting for Columbus, Little Feat (live) halfspeed master superdisc.

Best CD I own: Aja, Steely Dan.

I own original vinyls of every Beatle album except Let It Be. There's a lot of variation in recording quality. They tended to stretch (abuse) production (ponging) to the breaking point. Then Capitol abused them further in mastering.

Best Beatle LPs I ever heard, German remasters (clear/colored vinyl) ca. 1982.

Best Beatle material--the one I pick the most cuts from--Beatles 65. Also the most intricate and at the same time least overproduced (of the complex stuff).

Worst-sounding Beatle album, Hard Day's Night soundtrack. The distortion is also present in the film. United Artists release, not Capitol, for what difference that might make.

Least-played (some might call this heresy): Sgt. Pepper, White Album, Abbey Road.


Top
 Profile  
 
 Post subject: Re: Records are mainstream again
PostPosted: Apr Sat 21, 2012 10:36 am 
Member
User avatar

Joined: Jan Thu 01, 1970 1:00 am
Posts: 8708
Location: SoCal, 91387
I believe I have one record -either a 45 or an EP 33 that size- that has some kind of interview with the Beatles.

O/W my wax is either "Doo Wop", R&B, Pop, or R&R, '51-'64, on 45's, 33's, reel-to-reel (recorded on AM radio in the '50's-'60's), 8-tracks, cassettes, DVD's, and MP3's.

Lotta country on 8 tracks. Tammy Wynette serenaded me a lot in years past.

_________________
*******\\\\\\\\\******He Who Dies With The Most Radios Wins******/////////*******


Top
 Profile  
 
 Post subject: Re: Records are mainstream again
PostPosted: Apr Sat 21, 2012 12:43 pm 
Member

Joined: Jan Thu 01, 1970 1:00 am
Posts: 2754
Location: Gainesville, Florida
Roflmao! I still listen to 8 tracks and when they are really worn out or my 8 track player eats them...I throw them on top of my china cabinet...pull the tape out and stream it around the living room as a decorative memorial for a couple of days. :shock:[/quote]


U-R funny. true American freedom :shock:

_________________
CAUTION: Im no expert


Top
 Profile  
 
 Post subject: Re: Records are mainstream again
PostPosted: Apr Sun 22, 2012 12:28 am 
Member

Joined: Oct Tue 26, 2010 1:59 am
Posts: 299
Darn I was wish they would make a come back just think 8 track could get a hip name say loop track that would help sell them. Also the old style store display. You know the ones with the holes in the plastic front where you can look at the tape. Or like most drop it and it lands on the bottom of the case.lol

I do wish Kmart or walmart would bring back there 45's and lp's racks. I think even thought people can not stand them stores it would help make records have a big come back fast.

I did see something odd ball with a new lp set I got forgot the name have to look. The disk are wrong as far as it goes to me. $ lp's but there marked side 1 2 3 4 not the old way for stacking should be side 1 3 2 4


Top
 Profile  
 
 Post subject: Re: Records are mainstream again
PostPosted: Apr Sun 22, 2012 12:41 am 
Member

Joined: Jan Thu 01, 1970 1:00 am
Posts: 1539
Location: Haledon NJ USA
dberman51 wrote:
Ken Doyle wrote:
Abbey Road runs over 45 minutes. For that reason it's not one of the better wearing LPs.

Ken D.

Not sure that's a problem. "Standard length" of an LP was quoted as 24 minutes per side. I think it was when they would try to push 28-30 minutes that problems showed up.

-David


24 minutes per side is fine for a mono LP, but it's too long to be optimum on a stereo LP for both sound quality and wear reasons.

Ken D.


Top
 Profile  
 
 Post subject: Re: Records are mainstream again
PostPosted: Apr Sun 22, 2012 12:56 am 
Member

Joined: Jan Thu 01, 1970 1:00 am
Posts: 2307
Location: Boston, MA USA
Ken Doyle wrote:
dberman51 wrote:
Ken Doyle wrote:
Abbey Road runs over 45 minutes. For that reason it's not one of the better wearing LPs.

Ken D.

Not sure that's a problem. "Standard length" of an LP was quoted as 24 minutes per side. I think it was when they would try to push 28-30 minutes that problems showed up.

-David


24 minutes per side is fine for a mono LP, but it's too long to be optimum on a stereo LP for both sound quality and wear reasons.

Ken D.

Why do you think so? AFAIK the groove pitch for mono and stereo has always been the same. The horizontal stylus excursion is exactly the same, the only difference is the vertical motion component on the stereo disk which takes up no additional groove width.

Is my understanding wrong?

-David


Top
 Profile  
 
 Post subject: Re: Records are mainstream again
PostPosted: Apr Sun 22, 2012 1:33 am 
Member

Joined: Jan Thu 01, 1970 1:00 am
Posts: 1539
Location: Haledon NJ USA
dberman51 wrote:
Why do you think so? AFAIK the groove pitch for mono and stereo has always been the same. The horizontal stylus excursion is exactly the same, the only difference is the vertical motion component on the stereo disk which takes up no additional groove width.

Is my understanding wrong?

-David


As I understand it, the stereo groove needs more room. One example I know if is a Sinatra album. The two 10 inch albums "Swing Easy" and "Songs For Young Lovers" were re-issued on one 12 inch LP with 8 songs on each side. When the phony stereo version came out they had to remove some of the songs. Those songs were not put back on until the CD issue came out.

Attachment:
Frank_Sinatra_Swing_Easy_Songs_for_Young_Lovers.jpg
Frank_Sinatra_Swing_Easy_Songs_for_Young_Lovers.jpg [ 27.97 KiB | Viewed 487 times ]


Top
 Profile  
 
 Post subject: Re: Records are mainstream again
PostPosted: Apr Sun 22, 2012 5:14 am 
Member

Joined: Jan Thu 01, 1970 1:00 am
Posts: 2307
Location: Boston, MA USA
There are all kinds of reasons why songs disappear from certain releases. One reason that is far too common is legal issues that come up with the rights to some songs and prevent them from being released until resolved, which can take years.

I don't know of any technical reason why a stereo groove should be any larger than mono. I really think the pitch is the same.

-David


Top
 Profile  
 
 Post subject: Re: Records are mainstream again
PostPosted: Apr Sun 22, 2012 5:25 am 
Moderator
User avatar

Joined: Apr Wed 09, 2008 3:37 am
Posts: 9659
Location: Little Rock, Arkansas
I've been contemplating what will replace CDs, so I guess it has to be records. Of course, the new name for records among the young-in's is VINYL.


Top
 Profile  
 
 Post subject: Re: Records are mainstream again
PostPosted: Apr Sun 22, 2012 5:42 am 
Member
User avatar

Joined: Jan Thu 01, 1970 1:00 am
Posts: 8708
Location: SoCal, 91387
Ken Doyle wrote:
dberman51 wrote:
Why do you think so? AFAIK the groove pitch for mono and stereo has always been the same. The horizontal stylus excursion is exactly the same, the only difference is the vertical motion component on the stereo disk which takes up no additional groove width.

Is my understanding wrong?

-David


As I understand it, the stereo groove needs more room. One example I know if is a Sinatra album. The two 10 inch albums "Swing Easy" and "Songs For Young Lovers" were re-issued on one 12 inch LP with 8 songs on each side. When the phony stereo version came out they had to remove some of the songs. Those songs were not put back on until the CD issue came out.


I can't speak about re-issues, but I can tell you that in 1958, 33-1/3 LP's had the same number of songs in both the mono and stereo versions.

_________________
*******\\\\\\\\\******He Who Dies With The Most Radios Wins******/////////*******


Top
 Profile  
 
 Post subject: Re: Records are mainstream again
PostPosted: Apr Sun 22, 2012 5:50 am 
Member

Joined: May Sat 14, 2011 5:42 am
Posts: 2566
Location: Ft Worth TX
Vinyl, eh? That's not one thing. There is a spectrum of vinyl grades (the material itself). Another spectrum, how long it's pressed and cooled. The optimum is not conducive to mass production. Example, Eagles albums on Warner/Reprise/Asylum, some of the shoddiest pressings in the history of the medium.

Another spectrum, what the mastering engineer does to the master recording. Example, what Capitol did to original Beatles' releases. Take all the bass off so it sounded "louder" on the cheap phonos prevalent in the era that couldn't play bass anyway.

Then there's how many stampers are made from one mother, and how many retail units are made from one stamper.

Groove width is a standard. Groove PITCH is variable, at the behest of--among other things--marketing and manufacuring expediency, neither of which have any consideration for sonic quality.


Top
 Profile  
 
 Post subject: Re: Records are mainstream again
PostPosted: Apr Sun 22, 2012 3:28 pm 
Member

Joined: Jan Thu 01, 1970 1:00 am
Posts: 1539
Location: Haledon NJ USA
fifties wrote:
Ken Doyle wrote:
As I understand it, the stereo groove needs more room. One example I know if is a Sinatra album. The two 10 inch albums "Swing Easy" and "Songs For Young Lovers" were re-issued on one 12 inch LP with 8 songs on each side. When the phony stereo version came out they had to remove some of the songs. Those songs were not put back on until the CD issue came out.


I can't speak about re-issues, but I can tell you that in 1958, 33-1/3 LP's had the same number of songs in both the mono and stereo versions.


They certainly didn't want to give mono LPs an edge at that time, they were trying to sell stereo. If you check the times you might be surprised to see that many 12" LPs from that time run only about 15 minutes per side.

Ken D.


Top
 Profile  
 
 Post subject: Re: Records are mainstream again
PostPosted: Apr Mon 23, 2012 12:58 am 
Member
User avatar

Joined: Jan Thu 01, 1970 1:00 am
Posts: 8708
Location: SoCal, 91387
Ken Doyle wrote:
fifties wrote:
I can't speak about re-issues, but I can tell you that in 1958, 33-1/3 LP's had the same number of songs in both the mono and stereo versions.


They certainly didn't want to give mono LPs an edge at that time, they were trying to sell stereo.

No, I don't think so, to any extent. AM, mono, tube radios, and B/W TV sets were the mainstay...The bread and butter; FM, stereo records, Transistor radios and color TV were the new kids on the block, and priced higher accordingly.

They couldn't very well offer a stereo LP at a higher price and with fewer tracks, any more than offering a color TV set that received fewer channels than a B/W set could, or a Transistor radio with the same shortcoming. The new tech had to offer more, not less.

_________________
*******\\\\\\\\\******He Who Dies With The Most Radios Wins******/////////*******


Top
 Profile  
 
 Post subject: Re: Records are mainstream again
PostPosted: Apr Mon 23, 2012 1:13 am 
Member

Joined: Jan Thu 01, 1970 1:00 am
Posts: 1539
Location: Haledon NJ USA
Perhaps I was not clear in my earlier posts.

When stereo records came out, and mono albums began being reissued in phony stereo, they often removed tracks from both the stereo AND mono pressings on longer albums.

And of course the record companies were trying to sell stereo, they made more money on them. The fact that FM stereo hadn't happend yet gave them a clear edge. Just look at how many stereo phonographs were sold in 1958/1959.

Ken D.


Top
 Profile  
 
 Post subject: Re: Records are mainstream again
PostPosted: Apr Mon 23, 2012 7:07 am 
Member

Joined: Jan Thu 01, 1970 1:00 am
Posts: 3523
Location: Berkley, Michigan
Ken Doyle wrote:
...And of course the record companies were trying to sell stereo, they made more money on them. The fact that FM stereo hadn't happend yet gave them a clear edge. Just look at how many stereo phonographs were sold in 1958/1959.
Ken D.

A September 26,1960 Billboard magazine article on page 3 states that only 23.3% of all LP sales were stereo and that was up 43.3% from 1959. 13% of all stereo sales were classical recordings. Mono record sales were up and better than ever. The money was in mono records.

All radios were mono so the only way the average consumer could hear stereo was by going for a demonstration at a dealer or a friend’s home. Someone that just paid $500 for a nice hi-fi console does not want to hear that his equipment and records are already obsolete. It was probably the kids buying cheap stereo portable record players that helped stereo record sales. It took the 45-rpm record 6 years to outsell the old shellac 78-rpm record and it was the kids that made that happen.

_________________
That warm tube sound can usually be overcome by turning up the treble.


Top
 Profile  
 
 Post subject: Re: Records are mainstream again
PostPosted: Apr Sat 28, 2012 3:35 am 
Member
User avatar

Joined: Jul Sun 31, 2011 6:19 pm
Posts: 1787
Location: Kitchener Ontario Canada (left UK 2007)
Just been reading about the special music store day, sales of records are on the up, one guy made a quote "CD is just a piece of plastic nothing exciting about it, stick it in a drawer its gone, Vinyl you interact with you can see it, sounds warmer too"
Not much else you can say :)
Welcome back records !!!

_________________
Zenith "The Quality Goes In Before The Name Goes On"


Top
 Profile  
 
 Post subject: Re: Records are mainstream again
PostPosted: Apr Sat 28, 2012 5:25 am 
Member

Joined: May Sat 14, 2011 5:42 am
Posts: 2566
Location: Ft Worth TX
CDs are upper-rack dishwasher safe. And about as pleasant to listen to as a dishwasher. (Slight editorial exaggeration.)


Top
 Profile  
 
 Post subject: Re: Records are mainstream again
PostPosted: Apr Sat 28, 2012 8:39 am 
Member
User avatar

Joined: Jan Thu 01, 1970 1:00 am
Posts: 8708
Location: SoCal, 91387
CD's are getting a bad rap here, and I want to let you know that there is one thing they are far better than 45 or 33 records at.

I have a cable running from a satellite dish under an eve, upon which a bird would make his home daily and in the evening. Of course my pavement directly underneath became his toilet.

I hung a nice shiny reflective CD from a short piece of string off the cable, and voila, no more bird. His wings flapping as he approached what used to be his home would cause the lightweight CD to commence motion from side to side, in addition to reflecting, during daylight.

Now try that with a vinyl record! :wink:

_________________
*******\\\\\\\\\******He Who Dies With The Most Radios Wins******/////////*******


Top
 Profile  
 
Post New Topic Post Reply  [ 71 posts ]  Moderator: Larry Hillis Go to page Previous  1, 2, 3, 4  Next

All times are UTC [ DST ]


Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest



Search for:
Jump to:  










Privacy Policy :: Powered by phpBB