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Hi Don:

This seems to be the recording of which you write:
http://shop.lpo.org.uk/shop/recordings/detail.asp?5004,0,0,0,0

I listened to the sound sample, which is allegedly a "stereo" and to my ears, the music is coming 
just from the center (ie mono) but there's different disk surface noise on the left and right sides. 
I've heard more impressive Blumlein stereo, I think in a BBC radio documentary. Is there anything 
better on that CD?

-- Tom Fine

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Don Cox" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Wednesday, June 27, 2012 5:40 AM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Alan Blumlein 1933 stereo recordings


> On 26/06/2012, Michael Shoshani wrote:
>
>> On 06/26/2012 06:04 AM, Bewley, Nigel wrote:
>>> Alan Dower Blumlein (1903-1942) was a prolific British inventor and
>>> innovator of technology and was involved in projects as diverse as
>>> the development of radar and sound recording. In 1933 he developed
>>> his ideas on recording audio in stereo and the rest, as is often
>>> said, is history....
>>>
>>> Listen to Blumlein's experiments in stereo recording on the British
>>> Library Sounds website here:
>>>
>>> http://sounds.bl.uk/Sound-recording-history/Alan-Blumlein-recordings
>>>
>>> Nigel Bewley
>>> British Library Sound & Vision
>>>
>>
>> It's a pity that the Beecham material is unavailable outside the EU.
>> The EMI centenary box set seemed to have no stereo separation
>> whatsoever on the Blumlein/Beecham material it contained.
>>
>> I am curious as to why Beecham is restricted, when at least two other
>> recorder tests that clearly contain material derived from gramophone
>> records (and thus under the same copyright) are very much available
>> outside the EU. Is it because the two grams-sourced recorder tests are
>> pretty much a cacophony and thus perhaps not considered musical?
>>
>>
> Do you have the CD "Beecham Conducts Pioneering 1930s Sound Recordings"
> LPO-0040    ?
>
> This contains exceprpts from the Jupiter Symphony in stereo, and
> Blumlein's "Walking, Talking" tests.
>
> There are also examples of early German tape recordings from 1936 (in
> mono).
>
> Regards
> -- 
> Don Cox
> [log in to unmask]
>