Tom--Terrific! I ordered Maxell Duplicator 60 & 90 min tapes yesterday---and a small handful of extras to keep on hand.
And thanks for the recording tips.
Tyra
-----Original Message-----
From: Association for Recorded Sound Discussion List [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Tom Fine
Sent: Wednesday, October 31, 2012 6:45 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Seeking blank audiocassette recommendation
Hi Tyra:
Oral histories -- a prime example of what I've been saying. The donor wants them to be "released"
from a dead medium (1/4" reels) that few can access. Good for him! And good for you for helping him.
He's more comfortable using a cassette player (or his only CD player is in his car, perhaps, or like many of us, he prefers not to have to sit at his computer to listen to audio), so he wants cassette copies.
Here's how I'd do it, which I think is an efficient way. First, know the time-length of his reels.
Are the 1200' at 3 3/4 IPS? If so, that's 60 minutes per direction (side). Are they 1800'? Then that's 90 minutes per direction. Cut it in half for 7.5IPS recording speed, and know whether it's 2-direction (either quarter-track stereo or half-track mono) or single-direction (full-track mono or 2-track stereo).
Once you know what your primary media is, then you can select the best dub media. Go for C-60's or C-90's. I agree with everything everyone has said about C-120's. Avoid them. That place that I think Lou Judson linked has Maxell Duplicator Series cassettes. These are perfect for oral history audio and they are very well-made and tough tape (I have some OTR dubs made on these types from the 80's that playback perfectly today, and we have many conference recordings at work made on these types that are still in very good shape, dating back to the early 80s). I think they are LN ("normal" bias and EQ) tape put in a hearty shell. There may also be CRO2 tape in that series, but I don't think you need it. If it were me, I'd use Dolby B NR for the dubs, don't mess with Dolby C because it's not necessary and it's more prone to deck-to-deck tracking problems. Since oral histories tend to have wide dynamics (mumbling all the way up to clipping distortion during loud laughs or punching the table for emphasis), I would use NR to tame some of the ineviable background hiss.
Then, I would run the reels just once, and record to both cassette and computer at the same time.
This can easily be done with any mixer that has both a MAIN out (to the computer) and a TAPE out (to the cassette recorder). For spoken word content, don't be overly conservative on VU meter levels -- a little bit of clipping when someone laughs loudly is better than important, contemplative, softly-spoken words buried in tape hiss. On the computer end of things, this kind of content is actually a very worthy candidate for high-resolution ingestion because it may need some fancy DSP here and there to make words audible and DSP tends to work better when it has more information (resolution).
For playback of the reels, this is once again a case where it's better to get the audio "unlocked"
rather than beat your head over having a chrome-plated nuclear-clock-accurate playback deck. Just find something that sounds decent and plays the tapes at about the speed they were recorded (so the voices sound normal pitch). You can be almost assured that the recording quality will not be anywhere near a studio master -- if you get something where all the voices are clearly audible all the time, it's an excellent oral history recording. If you get one that also has a low-ish level of background noise, few scrapes and bumps on the recording microphone, no boomy resonance from a microphone place in the middle of a sound-reflecting table, etc, then it's in the top 1% of oral history recordings.
In any case, your donor's goal, unlocking this history so it's widely accessible, is highly commendable, and I apologize for my flippant remark about the cassette dubs.
-- Tom Fine
----- Original Message -----
From: "Grant, Tyra" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Tuesday, October 30, 2012 11:26 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Seeking blank audiocassette recommendation
Reason is, a donor gave us oral history on 1/4" tapes and asked if we
could make him cassette copies because he would like to be able to listen
to the tapes on his
cassette player---it's what he has.
Tyra
On 10/30/12 4:37 PM, "Tom Fine" <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>This is great! The very question I was too timid to ask.
>
>-- Tom Fine
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Dennis Rooney" <[log in to unmask]>
>To: <[log in to unmask]>
>Sent: Tuesday, October 30, 2012 3:18 PM
>Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Seeking blank audiocassette recommendation
>
>
>> Have you first ascertained that the person making the request is in his
>> right mind?
>>
>> DDR
>>
>> On Tue, Oct 30, 2012 at 2:32 PM, Grant, Tyra <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>>
>>> We've been asked to transfer a collection of audio content to
>>>cassettes.
>>> Is there a particular recommended cassette tape type I should try to
>>> order (assuming 60 min. tape length)?
>>> Thanks,
>>> Tyra Grant
>>>
>>> University of Kansas Libraries
>>>
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Dennis D. Rooney
>> 303 W. 66th Street, 9HE
>> New York, NY 10023
>> 212.874.9626
>>
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