A fairly recent Today programme mentioned interest in cassettes! Cassettes – not vinyl!
However then I started to realise how others had used cassettes in the past – and why they might have become popular and retained some affection in some users the ability to make up “mix tapes” for example. I have used cassettes since the mid 1970s, but I was never very convinced of the sound quality, though they were useful for mobile applications – in the car etc. I also used cassettes for live recordings, as I used to play instruments more frequently.
It wasn't until much later that I discovered that it is possible to get very good sound quality out of cassettes, but only with a very good player/recorder. Eventually I purchased a Sony recorder which could record at a quality level which many would find it hard to distinguish from CDs – verified by playing a CD and a recording at the same time and switching between them. However, many commercial tapes did not sound very good, even on good equipment, possibly because of the production processes, and possibly also because it's very hard to match the characteristics of each recording to the player – which is why often cassettes sound better when played back on the player which recorded them.
I still have quite a large number of cassettes, both commercially recorded, and many home recordings from broadcast and other sources.
I'm now wondering what to do with all these – as part of a big tidy up operation. SWMBO (not!) will bin the lot, but I'm more inclined to keep them and resurrect the Sony deck so that I can play them.
However – a very recent discovery is Amazon unlimited – currently on offer for new members at 99p for 3 months. I am listening to Abbado's Barber of Seville from tape currently through a boom box which still works (we used it for a long while to listen to tapes at bed time – which puts us to sleep …). I thought of recording this to a digital format, but then I wondered how much the CD would cost so went to Amazon. - https://www.amazon.co.uk/Rossini-Bar...Seville+abbado Answer £16.68 currently at am.uk
However it is also available used for about £7, but it is also on Amazon Unlimited.
This makes me wonder whether it is worth simply giving up and subscribing to Amazon Unlimited instead – and saving a lot of effort. It would also remove the effects of “pre-echo” due to tape print through. I do also wonder whether the dialogue is omitted in recordings such as this Barber if Amazon Unlimited is used as the listening mode. To be investigated further. After all 99p for 3 months is hardly going to break the bank – while I decide whether it's worth continuing after the 3 months period.
Anyone else want to comment?
However then I started to realise how others had used cassettes in the past – and why they might have become popular and retained some affection in some users the ability to make up “mix tapes” for example. I have used cassettes since the mid 1970s, but I was never very convinced of the sound quality, though they were useful for mobile applications – in the car etc. I also used cassettes for live recordings, as I used to play instruments more frequently.
It wasn't until much later that I discovered that it is possible to get very good sound quality out of cassettes, but only with a very good player/recorder. Eventually I purchased a Sony recorder which could record at a quality level which many would find it hard to distinguish from CDs – verified by playing a CD and a recording at the same time and switching between them. However, many commercial tapes did not sound very good, even on good equipment, possibly because of the production processes, and possibly also because it's very hard to match the characteristics of each recording to the player – which is why often cassettes sound better when played back on the player which recorded them.
I still have quite a large number of cassettes, both commercially recorded, and many home recordings from broadcast and other sources.
I'm now wondering what to do with all these – as part of a big tidy up operation. SWMBO (not!) will bin the lot, but I'm more inclined to keep them and resurrect the Sony deck so that I can play them.
However – a very recent discovery is Amazon unlimited – currently on offer for new members at 99p for 3 months. I am listening to Abbado's Barber of Seville from tape currently through a boom box which still works (we used it for a long while to listen to tapes at bed time – which puts us to sleep …). I thought of recording this to a digital format, but then I wondered how much the CD would cost so went to Amazon. - https://www.amazon.co.uk/Rossini-Bar...Seville+abbado Answer £16.68 currently at am.uk
However it is also available used for about £7, but it is also on Amazon Unlimited.
This makes me wonder whether it is worth simply giving up and subscribing to Amazon Unlimited instead – and saving a lot of effort. It would also remove the effects of “pre-echo” due to tape print through. I do also wonder whether the dialogue is omitted in recordings such as this Barber if Amazon Unlimited is used as the listening mode. To be investigated further. After all 99p for 3 months is hardly going to break the bank – while I decide whether it's worth continuing after the 3 months period.
Anyone else want to comment?
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