I think another factor is that few Scully machines survived. I've
never used one so I can't comment on their reliability or durability.
I've only seen two working, and one of them is Steve's.
That said, I can name at least two studios with Scully machines in
service for at least part of the 60's.
1. Stax -- numerous pictures show Scully 4-track in the control room
when they were still mixing to mono on an Ampex AG-350. There may have
been a Scully or Ampex 2-track elsewhere in the control room in the
pictures I've seen.
2. Fine Recording -- Scully 8-track installed in Studio B in 1967,
along with one of the first Audio Design and Manufacturing modular
solid-state consoles. Later swapped or upgraded to a Scully 12-track.
I don't think the Scully machines were in service very long, may have
been leased. Walter Sear's Moog room upstairs had an Ampex AG-440B-8.
When Studio A was rebuilt in 1969 for 16-track, it was with Ampex
MM-1000's and a huge ADM board featuring early routing automation.
I've also heard of Scully machines in several different radio
stations. From what the Ampex veterans tell me, Ampex basically shut
down manufacturing for a year or more while moving the facilities to a
new factory. Furthermore, the 300/350 type machines, updated in an
early solid-state design with AG-300/AG-350, were very long in the
tooth by the mid-60's -- and the MR-70 was a bomb in the market due to
too-high price. Here comes Scully with a new machine and more modern
solid-state designs at a time when Ampex was producing zero machines,
and priced competitively with good leasing terms from what I've been
told. Zappo, they get a toe-hold, especially in the northeast near
their Connecticut base (remember that many northeast studios already
had Scully cutting lathes). Then in 1967, Ampex finally gets back in
the market with the AG-440, which was a very durable machine with then
modern solid-state design, and priced to be in the heart of the
market. I believe Scully was out of the tape machine business less
than 5 years later. Remember also that in the late 60's/early 70's
era, 3M was working hard to sell tape machines outside of the West
Coast (they did get a small toe-hold in some northeast studios, but
Ampex was still king). Then Studer and MCI came along by the late
70's. Most 80's and onward upgrades or new studios I saw in NYC had
Studer tape machines, a few MCI's.
Question for Steve P -- do you have any idea how many 12-track session
tapes there are out there? How many studios actually used 12-tracks?
It was actually a forward-looking format (precursor to 24-track with
roughly same specs), but didn't have time to catch on before 16-track
appeared.
-- Tom Fine
----- Original Message ----- From: "Bob Olhsson" <olh@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, December 07, 2006 8:16 AM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Yahoo discussion group for Scully tape machines
Steve Puntolillo writes:
There is a puzzling lack of information on the web about Scully
professional tape recorders.
It's not that puzzling to me. They only had around a five year heyday
40 years ago in maybe a hundred US music recording studios. Scullys
had mostly been replaced by Ampex and 3M 2" machines by the time
recording studios became a common part of popular culture. Everybody
had to build their own one-off recording consoles back then too and
we see very little about this on the web.
--
Bob Olhsson Audio Mastery, Nashville TN
Mastering, Audio for Picture, Mix Evaluation and Quality Control
Over 40 years making people sound better than they ever imagined!
615.385.8051 http://www.hyperback.com