Thursday, March 25, 2010

Bit rot

Thanks to Tim Boyce of Masterdisk for bringing to my attention this irreverent (but for the most part solid) article on Gizmodo about digital data preservation. We are beginnig to realize the cost of keeping so much data in digital form. That is why my mantra is "prioritize, prioritize, prioritize"...

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Archives News!

Not one, but two articles on the first page of today's New York Times highlight archives. The first one is about the challenges of archiving born-digital material (in this case, Salman Rushdie's new exhibit at Emory); the other one, the very exciting news of the 160,000 hours of C-SPAN video now freely available on the Internet. It does not appear that C-SPAN has a viable business model for their web site yet, but I applaud the herculean effort that this enterprise represents. We live in wondrous times.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Coming soon: An 8-track museum

There is a cute article on the Wall Street Journal (thank you Andy Lanset) about an 8-track collector in Texas trying to build a museum. There are some errors in the article (for example, the idea that 8-tracks are sonically superior), but it is quite amusing.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Introducing the Selenophon



This one I had never seen before. Thanks to Jeff Berman, who generously gave me some old radio-related magazines, I learned about the Selenophon, which is essentially a variable-density paper-strip player (and thus can be called a direct descendant of Léon Scott's 1860 phonoautograph). Built in Austria, it may also be considered a precursor of the later (and much-malighned) 8-track cartridge, since it also carries eight (mono) tracks per side, for a total of 16. Note also the news announcement about the long-playing (LP) record, running at 33 1/3 rpm.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Archives

There is a nice new article in the Cleveland Plain Dealer about the archives at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum, headed by good pal Andy Leach. Andy and I used to work together in Chicago's Center for Black Music Research, and he is the nicest guy, as well as a heck of a pedal-steel player (he can be heard in my CD). Way to go Andy! You just may have the most fun job in the field.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Wow & Flutter

Last week-end we went to Wow & Flutter, a performance by Andrew Schneider at the Chocolate Factory in Long Island City. I could not resist the name. After so many years trying to minimize it (and finally getting rid of it in digital --unless you count jitter as a form of flutter), I seek it! The piece was more related to distortions of memory than about our woes with tape. The review in the New York Times is pretty accurate.(Incidentally, I just read about a homemade wow & flutter meter --for the advanced hobbyist).

Speaking of flutter, I am a big fan of Jamie Howarth' s Plangent Processes, which digitally removes extremely small flutter artifacts inherent in the mechanical nature of tape recordings (bearings, idlers, etc). It is probably the only restoration process I have ever heard that created a marked improvement without any side effects.