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arsclist resource, BLC Studio
The following is a description
of the BLC Recording Studio being sent in response to an email sent by
Richard Hess. I hope this may be of value. In particular, the studio has
done much archiving, mastering, recording and preservation of languages
from around the world, many of which are rarely spoken today. Please feel
free to contact me should you have any questions. Thanks.
--Gina Hotta, recording studio supervisor
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY
Berkeley Language Center
B-40 Dwinelle Hall #
2640
Berkeley, CA 94720-2640
Phone 510-642-0767
Fax 510-642-9183
The Berkeley Language Center
BLC Recording
Studio
The Studio
offers: digital and analog recording, playback, reproduction,
transfer capabilities; high quality voice recording; equipment for
playback of various types of recordings; language and some music
mastering and archiving; editing, mixing, production for
radio and other uses
Loans, Rentals: portable DAT and MiniDisc recorders as well
as Sony, Marantz cassette and video recorders;
microphones available
Clients: UC Language & Linguistic Departments, UC Office of
the President, Berkeley Art Museum, Cal Performances, National Public
Radio Enfoque Nacional, CBS, others.
Equipment: Pro Tools, Vegas Audio; analog and digital equipment
includes Fostex, Tascam DATs; HHB, Sony MiniDiscs; Ampex, Otari MTR10,
MX5050 with 2 and 4 track heads, Sony TC 850 with vari-speed, 2-4 track
head, Uhers tapes machines; Denon 720 and Nakamichi tape decks; Technics
SLP 700 CD player, Smart & Friendly CD burner; turntables: Rek-O-Kut
with vari-speed, Technics Quartz SL1200 with filter; Audiotronics board;
compressors, limiters, de-esser, gate, expanders: UREI LA- 4, Symetrix,
dbx DDP; Orban parametric eq; Yamaha and JBL monitors; JVC Plug &
Play VHS; Sony Hi8 camcorder; microphones: U87i, C451E, Sennheiser MD421,
ME40, and more.
Contact: Gina Hotta, studio supervisor 510/642-0767x12
or LL-Stu@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
At 01:09 AM 1/13/02 -0800, you wrote:
Hi,
Once again, sorry for the cross posting.
I'm trying to create a Web site that is of use to people while also
letting people know my media restoration capabilities.
As always, I like discussing your projects with you. They always present
interesting challenges whether or not I actually do any of it.
I have made a substantial update to my resources page trying to create a
referral service of who to check for specialty transfers. There are
obviously omissions in it. I hope there are no errors.
If you provide a resource and wish to be added, please let me know.
If there's a format you would like to know about transferring and don't
see a link to it, please ask. I may know some people who can do
this.
The resources page offers substantial detail in the area of reel-to-reel
tapes as there are literally hundreds of possible combination of tape
width, track configuration, noise processing, speed and equalization. I
haven't even tabulated speed--most people can do the most common speeds.
Many machines have wide-range varispeed as well.
I hope you find it useful!
Cheers,
Richard
Richard L.
Hess
richard@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Glendale, CA
USA
http://www.richardhess.com/
Web page: folk and church music, photography, and
broadcast engineering
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