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Re: [ARSCLIST] Haydn Society  (was Early stereo mass market tapes)
Hi Steve,
 Perhaps you could tell us something about the ownership and operation of 
HS if you were privy to that - I think it would be quite interesting.
 What is the current status of Haydn Society?  Some of their releases 
actually made it to CD a decade or two ago, but have seen nothing
since.
 Thanks.
 Best wishes, Thomas.
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Steven Smolian" <smolians@xxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, October 17, 2006 10:17 AM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Early stereo mass market tapes
One early duplicator was Julie Koenigs at Dubbings.  I visited there with 
a friend who used to run Haydn Society.  They were somewhere on Long 
Island. This would have been 1963.  I don't know how many years earlier he 
was in business.  I saw my first Philips casette there.
They issued a test LP as well.
Steve Smolian
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Tom Fine" <tflists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, October 17, 2006 9:25 AM
Subject: [ARSCLIST] Early stereo mass market tapes
Hi All:
I'm trying to find out some history of the early stereo hifi era, 
specifically the handful of companies that sprang up to make and market 
stereo tapes. This would be circa 1955-56, when the first commercial 
mass-duped 2-tracks were out. What was the business model for a company 
like Livingston or Bel Canto? Were they basically run like boutique 
record labels or differently? Aside from those two and Stereotapes, who 
else was making original recordings as opposed to licensing and releasing 
stuff from major labels or European sources?
Also, we talked about Emory Cook and I believe there's someone on-list 
here who actually worked with Cook. Did he jump into stereo tapes or 
stick with his two-cartridge grooved disks?
Finally, does anyone have any sales estimates on the first generation of 
tapes? I know they were priced a bit higher than mono LP records and the 
playback decks were expensive by mid-50s standards, so it was a niche 
market. But, reel to reel tape obviously caught on enough that by the 
quarter-track era (1958 or so onward), there was enough demand to allow 
for a lot of catalog variety and many duping operations around the 
country. By the late 60's, I think it was down to Bel Canto, Ampex Tapes 
and a handful of smaller dupers but I might be wrong on that.
OK, thanks in advance for any facts anyone can share.
-- Tom Fine
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