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A reel-to-reel tape recorder from Akai, c. 1978. An audio tape recorder, also known as a tape deck, tape player or tape machine or simply a tape recorder, is a sound recording and reproduction device that records and plays back sounds usually using magnetic tape for storage.
The idea for Switched-On Rock was conceived by Columbia Records marketing executive Russell "Russ" Barnard. Barnard assigned the project to three men: Dolph supervised the album and he tuned the Moog modular synthesizer, and his associates jazz pianist Kenneth "Kenny" Ascher and arranger Alan Foust played the keyboards and wrote the song arrangements, respectively.
[25] [38] Historically, informal 'Type 0' denoted early cassettes loaded with tape designed for reel-to-reel recorders. [25] In the 1980s, many otherwise decent and usable basic tapes were effectively demoted to 'Type 0' status when equipment manufacturers began aligning their decks for use with premium ferricobalts (the latter having much ...
A looped tape, capstans, and multiple magnetic heads for multiple echos on a Roland RE-101 Space Echo unit. In music, tape loops are loops of magnetic tape used to create repetitive, rhythmic musical patterns or dense layers of sound when played on a tape recorder.
The tape recorder transcriptions injects the presence of speech into the text. [7] The style has been described as New Journalism fifteen years early. [8] There are several meta passages in the book in which Kerouac in the words of Allen Ginsberg "writes about writing", [9] at one point in French. Donald Allen states that the book seems self ...
Sanyo Micro-Pack 35 tape recorder showing cassette being inserted. The Sanyo Micro Pack 35 was a portable magnetic audio tape recording device, developed by Sanyo in 1964, that employed a special tape cartridge format with tape reels atop each other. [1] The unit was rebadged and sold as the Channel Master 6546 [2] and the Westinghouse H29R1. [3]
The 1/4 inch Akai is a portable helical scan EIA and CCIR analog recording video tape recorder with two video record heads on the scanning drum. The units were available with an optional RF modulator to play back through a TV set, as well as a detachable video monitor. The Akai Electric Ltd. VTR plant was in Tokyo, Japan.
Ampex ATR-100. The Ampex ATR-100 is a multitrack tape recorder, designed by Ampex Corporation, of Redwood City, California, United States.It was introduced at the Spring 1976 AES Conference in Los Angeles, [1] and was geared towards the ultra high end studio market.