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Re: [ARSCLIST] "Aircheck" history
Hi David:
You bring up an interesting point because ALL tuners from ye olde days drifted somewhat -- be it
enough to notice within an hour air-check or not. But the original services were somewhat
labor-intensive: keep the tuner tuned, change a disk every 15-20 minutes, etc. Once 7.5IPS tape came
along, it got to be less labor intensive. I'm surprised a place that was changing disks anyway
wouldn't keep the tuner working. They must have been going by meters and not listening (happened
more frequently than you'd ever want to imagine -- including in disk mastering).
-- Tom Fine
----- Original Message -----
From: "David Lennick" <dlennick@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Friday, February 10, 2006 12:38 AM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] "Aircheck" history
Tom Fine wrote:
Thanks for all the research Rod! And others too. This is fascinating. I wondered why so many big
band performances were captured in air-checks, but I think I now know -- the transcriptions were
made by and/or for the sponsors, who would generally sponsor an entire program. Studios in NYC
that
did a lot of commercial work often offered air-check service, which was recording from a tuner in
the control room to a professional quality tape or disk.
Or in the case of Melotone Studios, a tuner that nobody bothered to check and which drifted
constantly.
I've heard some ghastly work from them, on a series of airchecks of Nelson Eddy programs which
someone
paid the studio to record (in the days before home tape recorders).
Sometimes a client or publisher would order up an aircheck of only one song, possibly as proof of
publication (?). In one famous case, a songwriter was given a copy of a broadcast of her song,
played as
a favor by an orchestra leader she knew, and the aircheck was given to a fellow named Dorsey. Ruth
Lowe,
Percy Faith, "I'll Never Smile Again". The disc still exists.
dl