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Re: [ARSCLIST] The first direct cut and taped lps
An associated question to Capitol's getting Ampex 200 machines is did
the decks run at 15/30 ips or 7.5/15 ips? I know that Capitol was one of
the only majors to use 30 ips as their preferred mastering speed, but
this may have been later, in the mid 50s.
Mal Rockwell
*******
Tom Fine wrote:
Reeves in NYC was doing recording to tape and cutting micro-groove
masters from those tapes in 1949 and maybe even 1948. Some of the
first Fairchild tape machines were delivered to Reeves. Fairchild
jumped right into the tape machine market after Ampex, but Ampex was
definitely first in the US professional market with the model 200.
Actually, some of the first 200's were delivered to Capitol in
Hollywood, so maybe they were very early too. I would imagine Columbia
started recording to tape and cutting LP masters from tape as soon as
they got their hands on a tape machine. Radio Recorders out in
Hollywood was also early in tape and in LP cutting. So was Bill Putnam
in Chicago.
-- Tom Fine
----- Original Message ----- From: "Steve Abrams"
<steve.abrams@xxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Friday, May 02, 2008 9:55 AM
Subject: [ARSCLIST] The first direct cut and taped lps
Everybody knows that the first microgroove LPs were issued by American
Columbia circa June, 1948. All of these recordings were dubbed from
macrogrooved originals. So far as I have been able to ascertain,
there were no LP recordings dubbed from tape for about another year.
I believe that Columbia, HMV and RCA began recording on tape in the
spring of 1949. Columbia and HMV used tape as back-up, but RCA may
have used tape originals. That is one question I would like
answered. Is there anyone who knows and can cite examples of the
earliest issued LPs from tapes.
Another question arises. I have raised it in various places and never
received an answer. If a year went by before tape came in, someone
must have been tempted to do direct cut LPs. Who and when and what?
I am interested in the first LPs to be issued from tape. That is an
entirely different question from the first tapes to be issued on LP.
Steve Abrams