- Post reply Log in to post comments3,028 repliesmaryeJoined:New year, new update. Tell us of your musical adventures in real time!
- uncle_tripelJoined:and so I decided...
...to build upon #52 and continue the 80's theme 'til delivery day
(order confirmation "check!")turn-on, tune-in, and veg out (that was the 80's, right?)
october 22 1983 carrier dome syracuse ny
jerry noodles set 2 opener
crazy->tease->fingers->china catPEACE for ALL!
uncle_tripel - DennisJoined:Uncle Trip and 7/4/86
I was there, I recognized the t-shirt Jerry is wearing :-)
Second set opened with a great Cold Rain & Snow intro that stretch until the first raindrops started down, then, "I married me a wife.....", and the cold rain poured down!
And poor Dennis in only a t-shirt!
- uncle_tripelJoined:always...
...avoided the NR on recording
and found very early the highs just got too muted for my ear,returning to some more 1978 this week:
june 4th 1978
at Campus Stadium, UCSB in Santa Barbara, Casome more friends of the devils? lol...
...= the "on stage" harley davidson acceleration into--->NFAmake LOVE, not war!
PEACE!
uncle_tripelPS: new avatar = mickey & jerry on 7/4/86 @ Rich Stadium
- JimInMDJoined:Noise Reduction and...
I used Dolby for a brief blink of an eye when I first started copying tapes. Being young and naive, I thought who wants tape noise to come through on the recording, duh.. no brainer, I flipped the Dolby switch on my Nak and hit record. I just want to hear the music, no hiss.
Very quickly reality set in. Was it Dolby A or Dolby B? Was the source tape recording using Dolby, if so, if you hit Dolby wouldn't it further compress the recording and further alter the sound, you can't play back using Dolby Squared, right? And what do you do in the car, in the boom box (yes.. we were just a few years out of 8 tracks when I started getting tapes). And who really flips or unflips the Dolby switch anyway based on how you think the recording was made. After all, were all these tapes properly notated every step of the way.
So I quickly gave up on noise reduction, I had a good enough tape deck that I shouldn't be so worried about tape noise. I quit Dolby and never looked back (and never worried about pressing the Dolby button again).
Just spit balling here, but my prejudices sometimes come to the surface when I hear a Dicks or Daves or Road Trips that sounds a bit muffled and I wonder if the particular Reel or Cassette or Betamax or whatever might have had a Dolby snafu baked in. To be clear, I have no proof this has ever occurred, I just wonder sometimes.
I should emphasize Jeffrey Norman / David Glasser, etc. have gotten better at their jobs. So if there is any compression or noise reduction used anywhere along the way, they better at making this music sound as good as it possibly can, regardless of the sordid history of the source tapes. Thank you GD, Mockingbird Studios, the good folks and Plangent Processing and all the others that get this music to my front porch. Oh, and thank you tapers too!