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The Realistic name carried on into 1994 as the rest of the Tandy-produced stock was slowly being sold off. In that year, all outsourced audio equipment formerly bearing the Realistic name would carry the Radio Shack name, and the video equipment was renamed to Optimus, another private label audio equipment brand sold by the company since 1967.
100 8 AA (x6) Has 5 drum buttons. [225] SA 77 2010 44 mini 100 8 AA (x6) Has 5 drum buttons. [226] SA 78 2010 44 mini 100 8 AA (x6) Has 5 drum buttons. [227] SK 1 1985 32 petite 4 Holds 1 sample. Also released by Radioshack as Realistic Concertmate 500 [228] SK 2 32 petite 5 4 No line out [228] SK 5 1987 32 peite 8 Holds 4 samples.
The Realistic Concertmate MG-1 is an analog synthesizer co-developed by Tandy and Moog Music as a basic, low-priced synthesizer to be sold by Radio Shack under their "Realistic" brand. With estimated unit sales of 23,000 from 1982 to 1983, the MG-1 became the best-selling synthesizer ever manufactured by Moog Music, [ 2 ] and is one of the most ...
The series was phased out in 1979, and almost all Phase 4 Stereo LPs were reissued on compact discs, including the classical music series. In 1996 a CD, The Phase 4 Experience, was released with classical and soundtrack recordings from 1966 to 1979 (London 444 788-2 LPX/PY 871). In 2014, a 41-CD boxed set of Stereo Concert Series classical ...
Stereo-4, also known as EV (from Electro-Voice) or EV-4, was a matrix 4-channel quadraphonic sound system developed in 1970 by Leonard Feldman and Jon Fixler. [ 1 ] The system was heavily promoted by RadioShack stores in the United States, and some record companies released LP albums encoded in this format.
A four channel quadraphonic diagram showing the usual placement of speakers around the listener. Quadraphonic (or quadrophonic, also called quadrasonic or by the neologism quadio [1] [formed by analogy with "stereo"]) sound – equivalent to what is now called 4.0 surround sound – uses four audio channels in which speakers are positioned at the four corners of a listening space.
Peter Otto, center, the Nashville Symphony’s new concertmaster, stands facing the crowd during the performance of "Encanto" Saturday, March 16, 2024, at Schermerhorn Symphony Center.
The 8-track tape (formally Stereo 8; commonly called eight-track cartridge, eight-track tape, and eight-track) is a magnetic-tape sound recording technology that was popular [2] from the mid-1960s until the early 1980s, when the compact cassette, which pre-dated the 8-track system, surpassed it in popularity for pre-recorded music. [3] [4] [5]