I was drawn to this peculiar album in Oxfam on a recent "hit and run" visit. It dates from 1966 and I really mean "dates"! Not in a bad way really but the scaled down big band sound does mark it as very sixties. Musically it's diverse covering a lot of show classics but also Dylan, John Barry, Carmichael, Bacharach and Allan Toussaint. Obviously the recording process is the star here... recorded onto 35mm film tape rather than standard recording studio tape *(at x 15 times the cost!) and while the left/right panning might be unsubtle it is at least interesting and the music is pretty damn good too!
I suppose this will be something of a test or reference album but first it needs a good cleaning to get rid of static and crackle
*
I was reminded that in radio, before mini disks, we would use standard video tape to record programmes as the quality was noticeably better than standard or even metal cassette tapes.
Ivor wrote:I was drawn to this peculiar album in Oxfam on a recent "hit and run" visit. It dates from 1966 and I really mean "dates"! Not in a bad way really but the scaled down big band sound does mark it as very sixties. Musically it's diverse covering a lot of show classics but also Dylan, John Barry, Carmichael, Bacharach and Allan Toussaint. Obviously the recording process is the star here... recorded onto 35mm film tape rather than standard recording studio tape *(at x 15 times the cost!) and while the left/right panning might be unsubtle it is at least interesting and the music is pretty damn good too!
I suppose this will be something of a test or reference album but first it needs a good cleaning to get rid of static and crackle
*
I was reminded that in radio, before mini disks, we would use standard video tape to record programmes as the quality was noticeably better than standard or even metal cassette tapes.
Nice one Ivor. You just can't beat the 'junk' shops for finding long lost oddities....Definitely something I would have chanced on myself. Very interesting indeed!
An album of 1920s steam trains recorded in 1967, lightning strikes, thunderstorms an all! I fuckin' love it! Something very surreal and yet soothing about it.
also this ... a trackability test record for Shure cartridges from 1973. Good for putting niggling doubts in your head
cybot wrote:Ah you just cannot beat the Charity Shops. Right place, right time you lucky sod!
How did you get on with the test record especially with sibilance ;)