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Re: [ARSCLIST] Marie Azile O'Connell in the news :-)
Thanks Dave. It's hit a few magazines and more are to come.....yikes!
Cheers
Marie
Marie O'Connell
Sound Archivist/Audio Engineer/Sound Consultant
3017 Nebraska Avenue
Santa Monica, CA, 90404
Ph: 310-453-1617
Fax: 310-453-1717
Mobile: 601-329-6911
www.cupsnstrings.com
-----Original Message-----
From: Association for Recorded Sound Discussion List
[mailto:ARSCLIST@xxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Dave Nolan
Sent: Tuesday, November 07, 2006 1:21 PM
To: ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [ARSCLIST] Marie Azile O'Connell in the news :-)
http://prosoundnews.com/articles/article_4643.shtml
Cups 'N Strings Taps Archivist O'Connell
Santa Monica, CA (November 7, 2006)--Bruce Maddocks, owner and chief
engineer of Cups 'N Strings Studios, has appointed Marie O'Connell as chief
audio archivist.
"We have been developing and expanding our archival division since we
opened in 2002," explained Maddocks. "With Marie heading the department we
now have one of the very best analog restoration and preservation
facilities available today."
O'Connell has been a pioneer in audio restoration and archiving since 1994,
when she supervised preservation of the 20,000 Open Reel Tape (ORT)
collection housed at Sound Archives/Nga Taongu Korero in her native New
Zealand. More recently, she designed and built the University of Southern
Mississippi's McCain Library Studios and was responsible for the
preservation of the entire Civil Rights Era in Mississipi Audio Collection.
Cups 'N Strings features multiple rooms for analog tape baking and archival
restoration, with the capability to transfer all audio formats into digital
storage. The collection of analog playback machines includes all
professionally supported playback formats, including rare multi-channel
head stacks and numerous obscure "pro-sumer" formats.
O'Connell invented the Isopropyl Drip Machine, an automatic system for
treating, cleaning, and lubricating analog recording tape affected
with "sticky shed" of the binders used to glue magnetic tape particles to
the plastic base material. The sticky shed syndrome goes back to the 1970's
when most tape manufacturers changed the formulation of the binder.
Unknowingly, the new formulation attracted moisture, and eventually enough
accumulated to make the tape go "sticky."
Recent projects at Cups 'N Strings include audio archiving of several TV
series from the 80's and 90's, selections from the Steely Dan, REM, and
Nirvana catalogs, various Hawaiian recordings from the 60s - 90s for the
Mountain Apple Company, catalog recordings of Ray Parker, Jr.
(Ghostbusters), Cheryl Lynn (Got To Be Real), and Steven Greenberg
(Funkytown).
Cups 'N Strings
www.cupsnstrings.com