I love Capitol's "This Is Stereo" record. Irv Joel went out and made an
amazing recording of the NY Central RR, I think. It might have been the
Penn Central now that I think about it. I forgot if he recorded along the
Hudson or along the Jersey shoreline.
Does anyone know if any or all of the Emory Cook stuff was released on
2-track or quarter-track tapes?
-- Tom Fine
----- Original Message -----
From: "Karl Miller" <lyaa071@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, October 17, 2006 5:36 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Early stereo mass market tapes
On Tue, 17 Oct 2006, Tom Fine wrote:
Another thing I'd love to know is what ever became of some of those
crazy stereo demo tapes like
"Sound in the Round"? I have the quarter-track version, which is vastly
inferior to the little
snippet of the 2-track version that's on Ampex's original 2-track stereo
demo tape they included
with their first consumer tape machines.
There were some funny, interesting and creative stereophony tricks and
gimmicks going on in this
very early tape era that never made it to the stereo LP era two years
later.
I am reminded of some of the work of John Chowning at Stanford. He did
some wonderful experiments with spatial illusions.
As for the discs...I have a several dozen discs at home in a section of
my
collection which I call, "It's Stereo." It includes everything from games
of Ping Pong to choruses moving from the left to the right speaker, also
a
series of discs on RCA, the LSA series plus electronic works like
Stockhausen's Kontakte which made heavy use of panning.
Most of these are especially fun listening with headphones.
Karl
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