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Re: [ARSCLIST] Article about digital archiving in the NY Times
Tom,
Some of us out here have multiple DASH/ PD machines and 1630s. Since  
we work with multi-tracks every day, it is more of a budgetary issue  
within the labels than with those of us who maintain the equipment.
John
jspencer@xxxxxxxxxxxx
On Apr 9, 2008, at 7:10 PM, Tom Fine wrote:
Here's one avenue I didn't explore at all. What about the digital  
multi-track session tapes? Sony, Mitsubishi and 3M, among others,  
made many-tracks digital reel machines. I wonder if any are still  
in operation and if these tapes are being transferred to Protools  
sessions and hard drives? Was DASH a standard? Didn't Sony and  
Mitsubishi make DASH machines?
But, if you count up every single master made on these Dawn of  
Digital early systems, it's probably a handful compared to how many  
1630 masters sit un-transferred in record company vaults. Why  
should these be transferred? Let's look at one example, Polygram/ 
Verve's extensive program of jazz reissue compilations. Many of the  
specific albums I know of were assembled to a 1630 master from  
multiple tape and even disk sources. The cost of that production  
was assembling the 1630 master. Thus the valuable asset of that  
release is the 1630 master as well as the old analog masters of  
which it is made. In the case of the Mercury Living Presence, the  
ONLY place where the producer's 3-2 mix existed was the 1630 master  
and the second safety master made at the same time. I think this  
was also the case with many Sony/Columbia and BMG/RCA CD's mastered  
from new mixdowns of old multi-track tapes. So these are not just  
CD manufacturing masters, these are valuable intellectual property  
of the record companies. I just hope everyone has been busy for at  
least the last decade migrating this material to managed hard drive  
farms. I sense they might have had other priorities ... Considering  
how much classical and jazz material once available on CD is now  
out of print, this is a big worry for me.