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8.6/10 [5] An Electric Storm is the debut album by electronic music group White Noise. Background The ...
Fidelipac was originally a 1 ⁄ 4-inch-wide (6.4 mm) analog recording tape, two-track format. One of the tracks was used for monaural program audio, and the other being used for a cue track to control the player, where either a primary cue tone was recorded to automatically stop the cart, a secondary tone was recorded to automatically re-cue the cart to the beginning of the cart's program ...
Alphamanbeast's noise directory Information base with links to noise artists and labels; White noise in wave(.wav) format (1 minute) UBU.armob.ca La Monte Young's 89 VI 8 c. 1:42–1:52 AM Paris Encore (10:33) on Tellus Audio Cassette Magazine archive hosted at UbuWeb; Noise generator to explore different types of noise; PNF-library.org, Free ...
White Noise's first release was the 7-inch EP Live at Surf City (1978) by VOM, a short-lived punk ensemble led by notorious rock critic Richard Meltzer and featuring future Angry Samoans Gregg Turner and "Metal" Mike Saunders. The label's second release was Avengers, a 1979 12-inch EP by the Avengers, produced by Steve Jones of the Sex Pistols.
The first EVP recordings may have originated from the use of tape recording equipment with poorly aligned erasure and recording heads, resulting in the incomplete erasure of previous audio recordings on the tape. This could allow a small percentage of previous content to be superimposed or mixed into a new 'silent' recording. [57] [citation needed]
The ear also responds less well to short bursts, below 100 to 200 ms, than to continuous sounds [1] such that a quasi-peak detector has been found to give the most representative results when noise contains click or bursts, as is often the case for noise in digital systems. [2]
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The result was the 3M Digital Audio Mastering System, which consisted of a 32-track deck (16-bit, 50 kHz audio) running 1-inch tape and a 4-track, 1/2-inch mastering recorder. 3M's 32-track recorder was priced at $115,000 in 1978 (equivalent to $537,000 in 2023).