----- Original Message ----- From: "Tom Fine" <tflists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>As to Steven's point about the old acoustic studios, I am surprised there weren't first-person accounts taken while the recordists were still alive. Are you sure there's not old, forgotten oral histories or biographies with some technical details? It's probably about 50 years too late now, but did anyone track down these guys' papers after they died? Also, were these giant recording horns just built in someone's basement? If they were built by craftsmen, you'd think there were drawings made and specs written up so the craftsmen did the job right, to contract. If you think about the glorified "acoustic age" that many collectors refer to, the early jazz era, this was 30+ years into the age of recording and I'm surprised things weren't done more methodically, documented and logged and the like. Plus, weren't Brownie-type cameras cheap and plentiful by then?
Yes...photographs do exist, but they were mostly intended as pictures of the ARTISTS, not the recording equipment (which is usually partially visible, and in the background...?!). As well, there were probably plans made...but I would guess most of those are long since discarded, as they became useless once the rooms/horns/usw. were completed...?! There MAY be details for Edison's "giant" (150' or so) horn...since it was one of the inventor's many experiments... in fact, the Edison memorabilia might offer data on the regular recording horns as well...?
As well, the schematics and details of virtually all the early electric recording equipment...and, in fact, such of the later equipment that was custom-built by factory engineers as opposed to off-the-shelf commercial gear...are very unlikely to exist today...?!
Consider that the folks involved with making records...in ANY capacity... would be extremely surprised to find out (should they ever return, that is...?!) that folks like us are trying to chase down EVERY detail of those records; after all, records...ESPECIALLY "popular records"...were considered expendable items, with a limited "shelf life," and were essentially deemed useless once their "hit" status faded into the past...!
I don't recall the chap's identity any more...but I DO recall being told, when I asked a musician about a session about three or four decades past..."Oh, hell, I don't remember all that <stuff>...we never knew anybody would ever want to know about it!"
Steven C. Barr