Dear Will,
I am so glad that the team at the British Library did this. As I was
beginning my transition from broadcast systems engineering to analogue
sound restoration, I was fortunate to make the acquaintance of Peter
Copeland through this and other lists.
In 2002 I was asked by a publisher to review a proposal from Peter for
a book (I was honoured that Peter had suggested me as a possible
reviewer). When I heard of his passing and didn't see a book, I was
afraid that much of his storehouse of knowledge would be lost.
This is absolutely WONDERFUL news that much of his knowledge and
perspective has been captured. I am so pleased with this. I will
shortly create a link to this on my website.
Again, many thanks to the British Library for making this possible.
This is the best possible memorial for Peter that I could think of.
Cheers,
Richard
At 06:14 PM 2008-09-14, Prentice, Will wrote:
Dear ARSClisters
I'm very pleased to finally be posting a link to Peter Copeland's
manual. As will be clear from the blurb below and the preface to the
manual, this is not a straightforward guide to best practice, but a
rich collection of history, detailed research, opinion, speculation
etc put together by its author over a period of years. There's plenty
to think about, and plenty to discuss. Enjoy!
Will
***
Manual of analogue audio restoration techniques
Peter Copeland, Conservation Manager at the British Library Sound
Archive from 1986 until his retirement in 2002, worked for many years
on a manual of analogue audio restoration techniques, designed as an
aid to audio engineers and audio archivists. Peter died in 2006 after
a lifetime dedicated to understanding the history and complexity of
analogue audio technology, and his manual was left incomplete.
The British Library is making the work freely available as it stands,
as a service to professional audiovisual engineers and archivists,
and as a testament to a life dedicated to the care of audiovisual
heritage. As a snapshot of Peter's viewpoint at a certain time, some
parts have inevitably dated. The core of the work however, is
unlikely to date. Focussing in unparalleled depth on the correct
playback of analogue sound recordings, the result of detailed
research into the history of audio technology, it will be an
essential guide for audio historians and for technicians working in
digitisation programmes.
The manual is freely downloadable as a 2.25MB pdf here:
http://www.bl.uk/collections/sound-archive/manual.html
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Richard L. Hess email: richard@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Aurora, Ontario, Canada (905) 713 6733 1-877-TAPE-FIX
Detailed contact information: http://www.richardhess.com/tape/contact.htm
Quality tape transfers -- even from hard-to-play tapes.