Steven C. Barr(x) wrote:
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Michael Shoshani" <[log in to unmask]>
>> Tom Fine wrote:
>>> When the QC listening
>>> was done, it was done with a stop-watch so that times could be known for
>>> problem, which were noted.
>> That's interesting - I read somewhere that records did not carry time
>> information until after tape was introduced, which led me to conclude
>> that the time was calculated by measuring the tape footage and dividing
>> it by the speed, rather than having some poor schlub sit there all day
>> with a stopwatch.
>>
> I suspect that the real reason for time information appearing on record
> labels was the fact that records were being used on radio "disc jockey"
> programs to an increasing extent...and the "deejay" needs to know in
> advance how long a disc will play in order to allow properly-timed
> "station breaks" and even program duration. IIRC, the "promo copies"
> usually provided this info before the emergence of tape mastering...
>
> Steven C. Barr
> (Who has done...and still does...deejay-based radio programs, and who
> finds it much easier now that CD players provide data like "time
> remaining...")
>
Timings actually appeared on record labels as early as the 1920s, on World
Constant Velocity discs. And they certainly appeared on some transcription
discs (or on the cue sheets sent with same).
dl (who still uses a stopwatch and who can still accurately add an entire
sequence of timings with 100% accuracy)
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