This has seriously become one of my favorite channels. Comfy, simple, thoroughly entertaining.
@schmatzler9 жыл бұрын
+Lazy Game Reviews I just read that in Duke Nukem's voice.
@RockBottomRiser219 жыл бұрын
tfw one of your favorite channels comments on one of your other favorite channels
@The_Haze9 жыл бұрын
+Lazy Game Reviews You and Techmoan are my go to channels!
@Captain.Scarlet9 жыл бұрын
+Lazy Game Reviews I smell another episode of LGR Thrifts :D
@holnrew9 жыл бұрын
+Steven W I feel funny inside
@NedSpindle5 жыл бұрын
I remember comparing metal tape with Dolby S, to a CD, on professional equipment. I couldn't tell the difference. The cassette was perfected at the exact moment it became obsolete.
@BavarianM5 жыл бұрын
Definitely I have a Sony metal tape with Dolby B I recorded Hotel California in it and it sounds exactly like The source
@levijessegonzalez36295 жыл бұрын
Would cassette have an "anolog" advantage in anyway? Or does it sound 100% like a CD?
@compucat5 жыл бұрын
Nope, cassettes won't have any sort of "analog advantage." The thought behind that is, quite simply, that since digital systems have a hard upper frequency range limitation imposed by sample rate, an analog system's lack of sampling gives it "a frequency advantage." In truth, cassettes do not have the speed or material quality required to meaningfully exceed a CD's 22.05 kHz upper frequency bound, and they inherit all the characteristic problems of magnetic media: inconsistent playback speed (wow/flutter/pitch shift), crosstalk, medium wear, nonlinearity, and inconsistent frequency response chiefly among them. On the flipside: one interesting "advantage" is that same nonlinearity (aka distortion). TL;DR: as you record a signal louder and louder onto a tape, there's a point where the tape can no longer accurately reproduce the input signal and will begin to distort. It's a disadvantage for accurate sound reproduction, but is a neat creative effect (and is often used or emulated when recording music!)
@jreyman5 жыл бұрын
Pioneer CT-W604RS... Good luck telling the difference between the CD (played on a Pioneer PD-F906, through a Pioneer VSX-D903S) and a Dolby-S copy.
@pintobean49194 жыл бұрын
It was sad to see stores slowly faze out tapes, then it was also sad to see CDs being slowly fazed out. Now I see walmart slowly gazing out DVD box and the DVDS themselves! I also was sad to see rental stores die out especially the movie rental titan Blockbuster, and movie world! I dont even hardly see red boxes a anymore. Was anyone sad to see payphones go btw? I do, the memories of using them is priceless and meaningful to me when I would be grounded as I was growing up and not being allowed to talk on the phone i would go walking and go and use the payphone for a few. I couldn't help it i was having major withdraws not being able to chat with my buds. The reason is my mother got the bill and went ape shit, I had ran it up to almost 300 dollars using *69, 3way calling and also *67 which btw *67 still works on cellphones! Ain't that amazing? For people who dont know it's where you put *67 in front of a number you want to call and it wont show up on caller ID it will show private number or restricted. I cant believe it still works on cell phone, I use it sometimes when I call a certain person who I dont want them knowing my number or its good if you are trying to reach someone,blowing it up and they know it's you so they wont answer, so I used it and on the 3rd ring they answered, I was so pissed too. It only worked once and that person would not answer restricted numbers thinking it was me and it wasnt most of of the time, found out he was dating many and didnt want to answer if he was out with one of them and sees another girl calling and not get caught with the one he is with. He is an asshole btw. I havnt dated since and it's been 4 yrs ago I cant trust guys anymore. Anyways I just wanted to comment. Sorry so long♡ have a wonderful and blessed day
@CUTIE_POXX5 жыл бұрын
I'm 17. Upon getting a walkman from my mother, I decided to go wander on ebay and ended up buying a cassette of "Killing is my Business" by Megadeth. Then I listened to it and was pleasantly surprised with the audio quality. Yes, listening to a walkman comes with a few issues, such as static noises and low volume, especially while riding the bus (which I do everyday to go back home from school), it sure is a lot easier to listen to it at home while laying on the bed or working on the desk. But it feels like owning something special. I don't wanna be that one kid who says "I'm the only one who listens to good old music in the best conditions", because it'd be a lie to say I don't use Spotify daily too. But popping a tape in your walkman and forgetting about your phone for a little while does feel nice. Anyway, I grew an interest in cassettes and I've been looking for cassettes for pretty much every "old" band I like (Alice in Chains, Slayer, Korn, Metallica...). I'm currently waiting for a double order : "Powerage" and "Highway to Hell" :D
@theycallmejames76494 жыл бұрын
Ah, Megadeth, I see you are the man of culture as well. I am now waiting for Rust in peace LP delivery. Old music formats truly have something special to them
@UrOpinionsSucc4 жыл бұрын
The walkman i have has an equalizer, i can improve the sound a bit as well as enable dolby NR B, but it's freakin' huge! 😂
@josephcontreras89304 жыл бұрын
You got good taste my boy!! I bet like me you get weird looks for using a tape deck. Just be sure to carry a bandolier of batteries.
@UrOpinionsSucc4 жыл бұрын
@@josephcontreras8930 yeah, but i wouldn't care if i got a weird look for using a sony walkman these days. But most people find it so cool.
@gplunk4 жыл бұрын
You know you're getting (are) old when Nirvana is considered ancient, and you were already thirty-something at the time when they were still touring....
@kcjoejoe3 жыл бұрын
Cassettes somewhat forced you to listen to every song on the album. This is why I know so many good songs from the 80’s and 90’s that weren’t ever heard on the radio.
@ryjelsum3 жыл бұрын
You don't get a true feeling for a band until you listen to their albums in full. Many bands can make good music that hits the charts, but that can tend to follow a trend and be the less adventurous material an artist makes. What makes a band unique is the whole of what they make.
@auntiecarol3 жыл бұрын
@@ryjelsum So true. I just don't understand the one-song-from-here, another-from-there mentality of digital track procurement and playback. With the LPs it was so much effort to leave one's comfy space, get up move the needle etc. just to skip a track, So much effort that it just wasn't worth it. As a result we listened to whole albums as the artist intended.
@fallenlean3 жыл бұрын
@@auntiecarol well I always listen to the full album whenever I get into an artist. In fact, I always listen to all of their albums fully. I just got a cassette player and i’m not that familiar with cassettes
@Kylefassbinderful3 жыл бұрын
@@auntiecarol It probably has more to do with your age. If you're growing up in an all digital/internet age then you're used to instant gratification so the idea of not picking exactly what you want sounds weird. I myself grew up with cassettes in the 80's and 90's so I'm with you I like to hear an album all the way through. And If I can't listen from one end to another then it probably says more about how good the album is or isn't.
@auntiecarol3 жыл бұрын
@@Kylefassbinderful Not so sure about that... I still have multiple GBs of songs I cherry-picked from Napster when it was a thing, and I routinely drag single tracks down using youtube-dl. Maybe albums are just not a thing so much anymore, and we are all just creating and curating playlists??
@BoylenInk5 жыл бұрын
The best thing about cassettes, and CDs too, was that when you bought a song or album you actually owned it.
@SirNarax5 жыл бұрын
You didn't own it then either. When you bought a CD, Tape or Vinyl you are buying a license to listen to the media for as long as the tape, CD, or Vinyl functioned but only in a private setting. You were not buying anything besides the license and the key, the key being the physical media. They were not yours.
@delksbwg37775 жыл бұрын
That's also possible today thanks to the modern equivalent of taping a song on the radio (aka downloading youtube music videos audio)
5 жыл бұрын
Or if you recorded your own compilation from the radio.
@basedbattledroid35075 жыл бұрын
No the best thing was when the cassette started to tangle or break down; it would go into slow motion.
@iGladsMusicWorld5 жыл бұрын
You didn't own the song just the medium on which the song was licensed to you.
@Skrapeg0at8 жыл бұрын
I remember when CDs first came out. My mom kept referring to them as "round tapes".
@GinHindew1108 жыл бұрын
Yo mama so fat even her vocabulary is rounded
@majoraslayer647 жыл бұрын
Its 2017. My mom still calls CDs "tapes".
@MrTruth1117 жыл бұрын
I used to have a verticle CD player with a window, so you could see it spin, most people who came by said, ''are you rewinding it?''
@markchas45547 жыл бұрын
Funny. Popular mechanics ran an ad for a DVD re-winder. Of course it was the April addition that year.
@kenlieck77567 жыл бұрын
One of the first CD store owners here almost called his business "Shiny Coasters"!
@fidelrivera28872 жыл бұрын
Best part of cassettes was making the perfect mix tape. You had to pay attention to song length to avoid dead space with no audio and songs getting cut off. Didn't know there were so many options... thanks for the information. Great video!
@albertpintor35222 жыл бұрын
I usually make side a and b Playlists and then let them play all the way through
@YouTube4Rudy2 жыл бұрын
Back in the 80s, my heart use to beat with anxiety- will The song finish before the spool ends?! Or should I start fading the song?
@insekki2 жыл бұрын
So much this. Also, because you can’t easily skip around like a cd I would pay way more attention to track sequencing
@scotthayes4135 Жыл бұрын
Hard to record off the radio. It's very annoying when the DJ talks over the beginning of the song or cutting it off at the end.
@shill6449 Жыл бұрын
Interestingly. Cassette allows copying of any material (say, when compiling your own mix-tape), even tracks that are DRM protected. Not so Digital, as DRM is a copy-once, software function, preventing multiple copying (and subsequent selling-on? ) A DRM protected Digital music track, can successfully be recorded to a Hard Drive, but not Ripped to a CD (or re-copied to USB) from their, if you're wanting to create your own mix (Tho' there are "naughty" pieces of software out there, that defeats DRM?)
@keystonedaytrip2383 жыл бұрын
Back in the day , it was a normal sighting to see a mangled cassette tape laying along the side of the road , which was tossed out the car window in a fit of rage 😒
@onomehtenialb3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, those POS Radio Shack tapes. Never saw a Maxell, Sony, Fujitsu, TDK or Nak tape on the side of the road.
@kazparzyxzpenualt81113 жыл бұрын
Those were the best days of my life!
@keystonedaytrip2383 жыл бұрын
@@kazparzyxzpenualt8111 Mine too !
@ash_aiden3 жыл бұрын
Once in a long while I still see mangled cassette tapes on the ground, it's pretty strange
@theechickengamerz3 жыл бұрын
Free music!
@Bigbuddyandblue8 жыл бұрын
"I once played a blank tape at full volume: the mime next door went nuts" -Steven Wright
@masterxyr5 жыл бұрын
gotta love Steven!
@pauldavies86385 жыл бұрын
When me and my mate took up electric guitar my downstairs neighbor came and put a axe in our front door quess it was a little loud for him
@thebrightsideofthemoon58295 жыл бұрын
Steve Wright (the Ipswich strangler) in the afternoon
@adolfohernandez61344 жыл бұрын
Dr Diablory heard that from a comedian years ago..
@ash_aiden4 жыл бұрын
Haha
@Clint_L6 жыл бұрын
Cassettes had a Side A and a Side B, so it’s logical that the successor is the CD ;)
@lonelyvariety6 жыл бұрын
Clint L clever
@quabledistocficklepo35976 жыл бұрын
Clint L, ??
@wclifton968gameplaystutorials6 жыл бұрын
@@quabledistocficklepo3597 the other sides of a tape would be C and D hence CD
@quabledistocficklepo35976 жыл бұрын
@@wclifton968gameplaystutorials, Is that supposed to be funny?
@wclifton968gameplaystutorials6 жыл бұрын
+Quabledistocficklepo I assume so.
@aboriani5 жыл бұрын
I am glad that I know what that B, C and S mean... TWENTY YEARS LATER!
@peterlekreutberger5 жыл бұрын
Yes i also 😂
@commentfreely54435 жыл бұрын
thomas dolby blinded me with science.
@0Myles05 жыл бұрын
Twenty years later indeed. I wonder if CDs might have been a little slower to catch on if Dolby settings were common knowledge.
@Willowphase25 жыл бұрын
Your not alone.
@cadreauribe5 жыл бұрын
The same happend to me, but just 30 years later!! hahahaha!!
@mattwoolley4 жыл бұрын
1. Buy vinyl record 2. Record it on a cassette. 3. Listen to cassette I have dozens of pristine LPs that have only seen a needle a few times.
@magnusmalmstrom11503 жыл бұрын
Thank you! I take your advice. I have lately become more and more retro in my taste of sound and music. Don´t have Spotify..
@onomehtenialb3 жыл бұрын
Yep, thats the drill. Play the LP maybe 3 times to break it in, record it, and then park it.
@howellwong113 жыл бұрын
That was because you didn't want to wear out your record, but use it as a master.
@drfish53933 жыл бұрын
If you used Dolby S on metal they would sound the business : )
@bakedalaska43633 жыл бұрын
@@drfish5393 that's me right there. Dolby-S on Chrome tapes (Maxell XL-II-S) is really, really good too.
@tedlogan56284 жыл бұрын
As a poor kid in the 80’s , I didn’t even know there were options. I just bought what was available in my small town store. Thanks for the education on tapes. 😄
@harrytuttle81615 жыл бұрын
I remember sitting by the radio waiting on my favorite songs and I would make a mix tape , I'd call the radio station and request songs too . if the tape broke , I'd open it up and repair the break with scotch tape , putting it back together was a challenge . good times . I miss MTV's Head Banger's Ball on Saturday nights and all the new Metal videos were coming out .
@norepetitivebeats5 жыл бұрын
I used to do this too. I suppose its the vintage equivalent of downloading mp3s from Pirate Bay today. Recording from the radio was more involved and fun though.
@harrytuttle81615 жыл бұрын
@Chris Russell That's funny cause I did that too . I had to convert a Eddie Money tape to Save Iron Maidens " Somewhere in Time " . So the Eddie Money Tape was Iron Maiden .
@eugenemv5 жыл бұрын
I did almost the same thing )
@heiaheiaheiahei5 жыл бұрын
Same here!
@wadeguidry66755 жыл бұрын
Me too!
@gast1285 жыл бұрын
Finally somebody who explains all those options on my cassette decks from 30 years ago.
@vannjunkin80415 жыл бұрын
We sure didnt know what all that crap was at the time.. but of course now that it's 30 years later I officially have the patience to learn..
@KortKramer5 жыл бұрын
I know, right?
@JimmyMon6664 жыл бұрын
Where was this guy 30 years ago dammit! :) I still find it funny even hearing all these youtubers from other countries, when I think back to those days in the 80's England could have been on another planet because it seemed so far away. No longer the case.
@ssga_tgbuddy30824 жыл бұрын
And none of the encyclopedias...what we had before wikipedia... before Google...hell before the internet... As I said, none of the encyclopedias would tell us these things
@kevnar4 жыл бұрын
"I was listening to some blank cassettes the other day, because I'll be darned if I'm going to take the manufacturer's word for it..." - Emo Phillips
@steevenfrost3 жыл бұрын
LOL that was the best laugh I've had in ages .Thanks.
@Dexter101x8 жыл бұрын
Are you sure the noise isn't copyrighted?
@rodriguespepper8 жыл бұрын
Okay, I laughed. Gotta be honest!
@pixeleric_8 жыл бұрын
watch out for justin bieber techmoan😂
@WR3ND7 жыл бұрын
I broke the 69 barrier. Sorry, not sorry.
@rodriguespepper7 жыл бұрын
WR3ND I know how that feels. Ever broke the 666th barrier?
@circattle7 жыл бұрын
I’d never put anything past Google and KZbin.
@BixbyConsequence7 жыл бұрын
The thing people don't realize, or have forgotten: recordings didn't HAVE to sound perfect. Sure there were always the audiophiles but most of us were plenty happy with the basic kit. In fact my wife's favorite recording is something we preserved off of an old vinyl record. There are scratches and pops and to her memory there were ALWAYS scratches and pops; the record was scratched before she was old enough to remember. She doesn't like the CD version of the same recording because the scratches and pops are missing. For her they've become part of that music. Part of a world where the medium was something you could touch and feel and watch moving; something you had to protect, and something that acquired the patina of use and age. There's a beauty in that.
@xXspiellionXx7 жыл бұрын
"Part of a world where the medium was something you could touch and feel and watch moving; something you had to protect, and something that acquired the patina of use and age." Wow that was poetic! Very beautifully said! I also think that many recordings that were not made at a major label studio with high end equipment didn't even WANT to sound perfect. Something like punk rock or similar wanted the listener to feel like the artists are just human themselves and/or that they don't want a major label make them sound good, because that would be selling out or something.
@spajdude7 жыл бұрын
I find beauty in the old cassettes my dad recorded on his mono radio/cassette player. Not Hi-Fi but they have a thing the modern remastered CD's with the same music don't have. The feeling of the times gone by.
@shantrannyduck7 жыл бұрын
yes absolutely these days i go to record fairs and pick up LPs at say £2 each then digitize them with shhh shhh sounds and tiny skips cracks etc if it is worse I edit with audacity then i have a "faulty" Lp going through everytime on my computer and sounding like 1975 :] the whole point of the operation .... fun to listen to those files walking around in mp3 versions .... let us play with the old on the new ..... diamonds should have a flaw to be perfect .... so should recordings ... never liked cds as they are pasteurized aseptized etc ..... we want flaws and we want them now Just started on cassettes recently ..... sound is amazing even once digitized :]
@visionist77 жыл бұрын
BixbyConsequence a few years back my friend acquired an E39 M5 (since sold off) with the classic German convention of a CD changer in the boot/trunk and a cassette deck in the dash. I was recording from CDs to cassettes at the time to play said cassettes on my newly acquired 80s boom box (fun date idea: drive a girl down the beach or to the park and when you arrive, take a boombox out the car and hold her hand whilst carrying the thing on your other shoulder. Set it up on a bench and dance with her to your choice of 80s hip hop or pop in public. Her reaction tells you all you need to know about spending any further time with her). Naturally I thought "let's test my new cassettes in Steve's car!" and sure enough, even though it was a cassette recording from a CD which had been burnt from an MP3 quality file from my PC, we both agreed that the inherent warmth of the sound was very enjoyable, and added greatly to the "retro" nature of the 80s tracks I had recorded on to the cassette. We weren't worried about all out fidelity (his car had the 14 speaker M audio package too, so it sounded good with CDs) but simply the "feel" of the sound. Bonus: rewinding and switching sides on the cassette from the steering wheel mounted buttons, plus watching the tape counter ticking away in the instrument cluster, was super cool.
@ingefossen41187 жыл бұрын
I know a guy who transfers his LPs to digital to the crackle and pop missing from streaming and CD.
@fisqual8 жыл бұрын
I remember researching cassette decks to DEATH when I was about 11 because portable CD players still skipped! I saved my allowance furiously and spent $220 on a really nice Sony model with Dolby S. ...I remember forcing my friends to listen to how good the Dolby S sounded but none of them were weird enough (like me) to care. It really was remarkably good though.
@SilvioHFernandez8 жыл бұрын
fisqual
@MrTruth1117 жыл бұрын
We believe you!!
@InflatablePlane7 жыл бұрын
I found a dbx tape deck for $7 at a thrift store and the dbx NR blew me away. I payed more for damn metal tapes than I have for any of my playback machines lol.
@CinqueMalcolm3 жыл бұрын
I still have traumatic flashbacks from cassettes in the 80s getting tangled up while playing. The mad rush to the deck to save them...... Ah the memories.
@ronhamann21793 жыл бұрын
While moving a few years back I found three or four unwrapped Maxwell XLII 90’s - smiled the rest of the day while remember making mix tapes
@digitalchaos19803 жыл бұрын
Ah yes, gotta love a good ole 'tape salad' 😂
@diogoleonardo78483 жыл бұрын
Bad Memories... Lost lots of tapes....
@troykinnison45753 жыл бұрын
@@ronhamann2179 MIX tapes both started an ended with the cassette tape
@troykinnison45753 жыл бұрын
Listening to radio in your room with a tape ready to record your favorite song off the radio!! Getting mad at DJ talking over the beginning 10 seconds but u had to go ahead an push record !!!!
@theonecalledvino81655 жыл бұрын
Seeing that old catalog of boom boxes and walkmans made my heart warm up.
@Stimpy775 жыл бұрын
I still remember the nerdgasm I got when I bought a reeeally nice walkman that supported dual direction cassette playback and AM/FM radio and had metal/chrome playback type switch and a bass boost and had really handsome technical aesthetic design. I was on the bleeding edge of high tech.
@BeetleBuns5 жыл бұрын
Damn that sounds awesome... we always heard of playing tapes backwards as kids, but we never could get a machine capable of it
@pirate0jimmy5 жыл бұрын
@@BeetleBuns I had an Akai portable that was 2/3rds the size of the Sony am-fm cassette with DOLBY b/c and ran on ONE AAA! it was all-metal and I suspect expensive. It was auto-reverse with a 4-track head and switching capstans. Clicky with lots of relays.
@BeetleBuns5 жыл бұрын
@@pirate0jimmy holy crap... it's hard to find ANYTHING that can run on 1 AAA, that thing must have been sweet
@londontrada5 жыл бұрын
You were truly "wired for sound". I can see you on your roller skates now. 😂
@karlmay53065 жыл бұрын
I remember having an off-brand walkman that airport security decided to open up in case I was carrying a bomb (I was about 8 and it was about 1992). It never worked again. I was not on the bleeding edge of high tech.
@olivershearer30349 жыл бұрын
Just writing a comment to say how much I appreciate your videos! I really have learnt a lot about audio and various other things from the content you produce. I remember playing with tapes when I was very young, that would have been the early 2000's and I enjoyed it. I'm very impressed of the quality you can get from tapes, I had no idea! I look forward to whatever you have to show us next!
@v1ncn79 жыл бұрын
+Oliver Shearer I agree, Techmoan always uploads quality content. I am glad to have found his channel and I am glad I have visited Manchester and it's shopping centre Arndale myself. :D
@SenjayaXiera9 жыл бұрын
agree!! this video really unique and educative.
@dodidj99388 жыл бұрын
+v1ncn7 you recommend us to go and visit Manchester????
@joeblankenship3773 жыл бұрын
Wow. That's pretty damn impressive. I never owned many cassettes. They were on the way out when I started buying music. But I think if Dolby-S systems and metal tapes had become more affordable, they truly could have given CD a run for their money. No skipping or scratching is a pretty big deal when you take audio quality out of the equation. Didn't help MD though, unfortunately.
@stofferrussell2 жыл бұрын
Richer Sounds in the UK used to sell cassettes well cheaper than anywhere else. I bought my blank cassettes, MDs and CDs from where as well as my hi-fi stuff.
@perpetualmotion3572 жыл бұрын
Absolutely. I remember when I bought Master Of Puppets for the first time I had the same tape 6+ years before buying it on CD. Frequently played on CD's I probably bought 3 copies in that same time period..before I had a computer to burn a new copy once and never have to take it out again. I took care of my CD's too. I also noticed different CD's had different aversions to skipping. I had a Who Made Who disc that was virtually resistant to skipping and yet I've had others where you touch it wrong and there goes tracks 3-4. I'm sure the record industry made even more of a killing when people had to buy their albums multiple times.
@AvanToor5 жыл бұрын
TDK SA-90 That string of characters probably are at the heart of why I love music today.
@UrOpinionsSucc4 жыл бұрын
I have a TDK SA from the 80's!
@spikespa52087 ай бұрын
Still have dozens of those with '70s and '80s albums on them. Have rerecorded over some and they still sound great. Never had one malfunction. Can't say the same of BASF.
@matheusrosa947 жыл бұрын
I admitelly recently bought a sealed metal tape out of curiosity, a Sony XR 60 (wasn't too expensive, but not cheap either), recorded some tunes that I consider "benchmark tracks" with it with dolby B on (no C or S on my deck), holy hell you weren't kidding. It's 98% indistinguishable from the source material, and dolby B is already good enough for me.
@rochester2126 жыл бұрын
Dolby sucks, use a decent rig and cassette and you don`t need dolby at all.
@AntPDC6 жыл бұрын
+ normie Exactly.
@josephbennett42366 жыл бұрын
I agree, Mr normie x.
@garethonthetube6 жыл бұрын
Dolby sucks if the deck isn't calibrated because it exaggerates frequency response errors. Dolby B is affected less than Dolby C because it has less gain. Self calibrating decks are the only way to get the best out of Dolby. Pro studios used Dolby A which is way more sophisticated
@jari20186 жыл бұрын
Metal recordings age - anyway mine did they start to sound worse and loose pitch after only weeks but still sounds better than normal or chrome and dolby is just bad - in the beginning of dolby you could hear a pumping sound even with dolby C occasionally - for me the magic was ferrochrome which didn't age as metal but had same dynamic range
@billjones2515 жыл бұрын
What annoyed me the most was when the batteries in a walkman got too low, the playback speed would slow down.
@chucky87875 жыл бұрын
I forgot about that.....thanks for the nostalgia :-)
@ketchupbreads50525 жыл бұрын
@@chucky8787 man those last gen sony walkmans were amazing
@chris7705 жыл бұрын
Peanut parents in syrup
@antwango5 жыл бұрын
Haha i remember that, but i only remember that on a cheap plastic walkman that they used to giveaway as gifts with everything lol, cant remember how i got mine lol maybe a magazine
@jamesbrown87665 жыл бұрын
And when the tape got stretched. I had a Simon and Garfunkel’s Greatest Hits with a stretched spot on the tape. The pitch would drop one semitone the last time they would sing “parley, sage, rosemary, and thy...y...me.” Cracked me up every time I’d hear it.
@RCAvhstape3 жыл бұрын
Lou Ottens, inventor of the cassette for Philips, has passed today at age 94.
@jerry187413 жыл бұрын
RIP
@kazparzyxzpenualt81113 жыл бұрын
R.I.P. Louis you made many things happen we can never thank you enough.
@gixxerboy5553 жыл бұрын
he was Dutch and worked all of his life for Philips..he also invented the CD.
@jeppepedersen70063 жыл бұрын
Rip
@vijfsnippervijf3 жыл бұрын
😭😭
@tonymunn5 жыл бұрын
I learned how much I didn't know back in the 80's and early 90's regarding cassette tapes.
@MetalJesusRocks8 жыл бұрын
I really wish I would have had this video back in the 80s when I listened exclusively to cassettes and vinyl! Really informative video!
@svenjansen21348 жыл бұрын
You rock dude!
@Rgknol8 жыл бұрын
Just what I thought! I would cherish the VHS tape it was recorded on 😊
@garydunn30378 жыл бұрын
+Rob Knol The only way forward is to digitise everything. If you want to keep it that is. Tapes, be it cassette audio or VHS videojust deteriorates with age. I've spent ages transferring old audioand video tapes to disc. Now I know these recordings will bearound for longer than if left in the old tape format.
@1Howdy18 жыл бұрын
+MetalJesusRocks This is a cool video, isn't it. My Dad was big time into reel to reel back in the 50's and 60's, so from the time they just hinted something called Dolby might be available to the public he almost made it his life's mission to teach me what Dolby was. Today I finally get it, lol.
@kgisabeast8 жыл бұрын
Cool to see the people I subscribe to watching other videos, small world on KZbin!
@Mr.A_LDN5 жыл бұрын
The metal tapes were saved for really special favourite lp's
@josephcontreras89304 жыл бұрын
Yeah beatles elvis and pink floyd. Pink floyd you need to use headphones to enjoy every nuance and subtle sounds and you have to just sit down lie down and actually listen to it.
@estellaruiz31253 жыл бұрын
@@josephcontreras8930 damn. You know where I could buy one? If not I’m going to comb all my goodwills.
@FredET3 ай бұрын
This is my first ever time watching this video, and the machine u bought just turned 30 years old today (94.8.23) 😂
@Zunken5 жыл бұрын
Making a mixtape for a crush or a friend. Oh, how I miss the days. And no, sending someone a link of a playlist you made is not the same. Or it could be if songs were unskippable.
@udalix5 жыл бұрын
It's possible to fast forward a cassette. One could skip songs on a mixtape.
@Nizzon.5 жыл бұрын
I would LOVE such a feature, unskippable playlists!
@CalvinG9735 жыл бұрын
r/gatekeeping
@arrmigliato5 жыл бұрын
i still do record mixtapes for my crush/friends lol i really love the feeling of a cassette tape
@jimguitarfan5 жыл бұрын
For anyone who still remembers the total joy of creating mixtapes (it taking so long in real time is part of the pleasure, for me) the movie High Fidelity starring John Cusack is a real treat.
@ForrestBobHD7 жыл бұрын
Gotta be one of my favorite Techmoan vids! I was born in 1997 and only remembered cheap tape on a cheap boombox, so I was really excited when I got my first CD when I was five But about a year ago I got my driver's licence and inherited an old Ford Taurus with a working tape player, and having seen this I thought, why not give it another go? Plus, I had been collecting music on vinyl and found it much easier to copy them to tape with the equipment I have, and I must say, I've never had so much fun listening to old music in an old car. Shame all my dad's old tapes are wore beyond recognition
@swunt107 жыл бұрын
I just found 2 old BASF self recorded tapes in the glovebox in my old car. they must have been there at least since I got it 10 years ago. my car is always parked outside summer and winter and I even had the odd leaky roof problem with water everywhere. tapes played just fine when I tried them out. no idea how your father destroyed his tapes. they seem indestructible to me.
@macnerd936 жыл бұрын
Being born in 1993 I grew up using my grandads high end Rotel cassette deck. Its an awesome format if you have high end equipment.
@mogshade666 жыл бұрын
ForrestBob Great memories x 😊
@scaleop46 жыл бұрын
very good decks, i am using at the min a Yamaha kx-650 it was made back in 91..sounds really good to.
@EVmike6 жыл бұрын
Not indestructible, but sturdy. Regular cleaning of the mechanism is required, and the car decks were notoriously hard to clean. I used to use a Similar story, I found a tape player in my '97 pickup. After 10 years of owning it. Right there in the dash, below the radio, above the CD player. Probably needs lube by now, it did try to eat a tape after a few successful plays.
@VictorEstrada4 жыл бұрын
I think the coolest thing about CDs was the fact the you could skip songs whereas with tapes you had to forward and try to guess when your fav song would start. You could also put it on top of your speakers without magnetizing it
@equesfuscus2 жыл бұрын
There were even portable stereos that could fast forward to the next song by listening to the silent part between songs. It helped.
@who_cares848 Жыл бұрын
Toward the late 80s, sony came out with AMS which could detect the silence between the songs and fast forward through them, then stop a second or so before the beginning of the next song.
@spikespa52087 ай бұрын
My last car cassette deck had that feature. Always worked just fine.
@IamMagPie3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for making and sharing this video. I just realised I have become an old man. I grew up in the 80s, and making mixed tapes, recording my fav songs from the radio, or copying my friends tapes was part of my life. The best part was working my way through my parents collection of tapes. This is how I discovered The Beatles, who are still my favorite band. This winter I am going through my boxes and I have set up my PHILIPS 900 stereo system. It still works great, and I have just started making mixed tapes with 80s music. The reason is because I have bought a 1982 Corvette, and it has a tape recorder. Come summer, I will be cruising down the road in an 80s car, listening to 80s music, played on 80s equipment.
@fintanoclery26983 жыл бұрын
Those C3 Corvettes are beautiful.
@IamMagPie3 жыл бұрын
@@fintanoclery2698 Thank you - yes I agree. I have dreamt about one for ten years, so when I go the chance to buy a nice one, I did. Looking forward to the summer this year :-)
@fintanoclery26983 жыл бұрын
@@IamMagPie enjoy your summer, cheers!
@IamMagPie3 жыл бұрын
@@fintanoclery2698 Thank you. I wish you a great summer too. All the best, greetings from Norway.
@meow80369 жыл бұрын
u are really improving your videos
@Techmoan9 жыл бұрын
+BackyardFun I try my best, sometimes things go a bit off the rails, this one took a week longer than I had planned.
@Wiktorion9 жыл бұрын
+Techmoan That extra week of work does pay off though - this video was a lot more enjoyable compared to the shorter ones. It's well cut too! Audio levels differ a bit between clips though - the ones with you facing the camera are noticeably louder.
@Techmoan9 жыл бұрын
+Synthesizer Wiggler 303 believe it or not, whilst they might appear louder, it's more to do with oversaturation. I can see the volume I output to the finished file during editing and it's all pretty much the same.
@Wiktorion9 жыл бұрын
Huh, that's interesting.
@XtremeKremaTor9 жыл бұрын
+Techmoan any reason for camera clicks every now and then?
@mikeoldroydtube4 жыл бұрын
I remember buying an album on cassette in the 1980s. Someone I knew played the recording they had made of the same album, copied from a CD onto a higher quality metal cassette. Their pirate copy sounded better than my original. Such a pity that many in the record industry saved a few pennies on quality cassettes and undermined the case they were making at the time that illegal copies were of inferior quality.
@TheSonicSegaNerd8 жыл бұрын
I'm 18 years old and have used cassettes my whole life. Funny this is, my parents always said they were shit! I guess they must not have taken good care of them because mine have always sounded great!
@DFX2KX8 жыл бұрын
Tape is a good format as far as analogue goes, but man it didn't suffer abuse much.
@VeryDryBones8 жыл бұрын
The Sonic Sega Nerd my dad's tapes all still sound good but my mom's tapes are all pretty much destroyed. my dad's home collection vs mom's car tapes...car tapes always lose
@whiskerbiscuit66745 жыл бұрын
Anyone who didn't have their tape get eaten or broken was never a real music fan. Only a casual listener. I had tonnes break and fall apart and I've always looked after my collections. My cd's are scratchless, minus the ones I purchased used. Cassettes wear out with use. Anything mechanical does. If yours are still ok then you never actually listened to them often. I'm not being a hater. Just calling it like it is. it's the same as cars. Some people will buy a car and only drive it to church on sunday. Others will buy it and it'll be dead in 5 years because they use it every day to work and back. I listened to tapes all day everyday. They fall apart.
@pauldavies86385 жыл бұрын
@@VeryDryBones the heat off the car heater distorted them that's why
@petersterk2453 жыл бұрын
Years after you posted this video, I got my own Sony TC-S1. Pinch rollers needed replacing, but it is working superbly now. Thanks for recommending it!
@robpartridge9148 жыл бұрын
Dear Matt, I watched this and other of your videos and decided to buy a non-working Nakamichi cassette deck on Ebay for about 25gbp. some attention to the idle wheel sorted the problem. I have just recorded some music onto a blank Type 1 cassette and was blown away by the quality, much much better than I don't remember. Got some type 2 cassettes on order and will be trying these our as soon as they arrive. I would have never been confident enough to even attempt to fix anything before watching your videos... Thanks.
@patrickmccarron28175 жыл бұрын
there is something about listening to Wu-tang Clan on cassette that just sounds right, I feel like their first album was mastered for cassette. Same with a lot of early 90's New York hip hop.
@martymar6664 жыл бұрын
Patrick McCarron I couldn’t agree more. Wu was big obviously, but Digable Planets Reachin was a HUGE tape for me. I bought multiple copies even after cds had become super prolific. You’re spot on, some tapes were made for cassette.
@jameskoralewski10064 жыл бұрын
Crappy music for a crappy medium!
@gael57394 жыл бұрын
James Koralewski ok, james
@espenfarstad16974 жыл бұрын
@@jameskoralewski1006 What music do you like James?
@jameskoralewski10064 жыл бұрын
@@espenfarstad1697 Classical, Classic rock, some country, easy listening, and new age. What types do you like?
@negative.infinity8 жыл бұрын
Now I'm going to transfer all of my digital music over to cassette tape and rock it old school style. *And* I'm going to do it the proper way; by playing my music on one stereo, as I hold the cassette player up to its speakers and hitting record. All while forbidding anyone around me from talking or making any noise once I hit record. Ah, memories...
@SAADATAMNA8 жыл бұрын
I remember doing that as a kid tooo..... LOL.... couldn't afford proper stuff so invented neat ways of doing things and back in the 80s you didn't really care that much on quality back then
@negative.infinity8 жыл бұрын
Saadat Saeed Things were so much simpler back then, haha.
@freeecountryy8 жыл бұрын
My buddy gave me a copy of a new CD that I wanted to hear. I put it in my car stereo and it sounds terrible. All sorts of muffled moving around. Suddenly, I hear his mother yelling in Portuguese and a door slams! Haha.
@SAADATAMNA8 жыл бұрын
De fnder lol
@steveh34838 жыл бұрын
yes sunday nights were fraught with silent arguments if anyone dare cough or speak whilst the charts were on and mic from my ITT recorder was positioned by the speaker on the floor...
@MoCheez4 жыл бұрын
Yes, there is a point in recording onto cassette tapes. For us walkman owners and users (that also includes my 17yo son), it's the only way to take away with you the right amount of favourite tracks or even listen to a single album, without being drown in gigabytes of mp3's from which you can never decide what to listen to… and with added analog coolness ;-) Seriously loving your channel, dude.
@brettarchinal98873 жыл бұрын
I bought albums. For the first play, I recorded them on Metal tape usually with Dolby B or S. Then put the record away. 80% of my records have only been played a few times because I listen to the tapes. When they wore out or were damaged I pulled the record out and made another tape. I still have most of the tapes and they still play great.
@robertholtz3 жыл бұрын
I loved cassettes well into the emergence of CDs. That said, what won me over to the CD format was random-access play. That was the game changer.
@darinb.32732 жыл бұрын
Couldn't beat the almost instant song selection and the clarity compared to cassette or vinyl (yeah try that while riding in a vehicle) it was tried with 45's but well it didn't go well or take off, playing records in the vehicle.
@darinb.32732 жыл бұрын
@Jim Marbaz Yes indeed CD can be played a 1000 times and it sounds the same as the 1st play.
@mdarrenu2 жыл бұрын
Cassettes were very much a social product in that you shared them easily and you made them for friends as presents and you put a lot of work into making them. This is why cassettes are superior in terms of social value. CDs you could do somewhat the same - but the work involved was so much less. Digital download destroyed the social relations involved in these activities. It's like going from dating leading to a good relationship to service from a call girl that comes to your house.
@StupStups2 жыл бұрын
Excellent analogy! I've just made a mixtape for the first time in about 20 years. Was surprised how enjoyable it was setting the rec levels and cueing up each track. Felt more artistic than the same process on a laptop...
@mdarrenu2 жыл бұрын
@@StupStups good for you!! young people don't know the fun.
@michaelullman1242 жыл бұрын
@Devin I have a box stored I couldn't throw away. technology jumped the shark in 1990.
@kiwibass Жыл бұрын
Absolutely! Whenever you've just bought a new LP, next thing to do was goin' to your buddy's house for him to tape it...
@xteeer2238 Жыл бұрын
Cd sucked imho. They hadn't the good things of tapes (cheap and easy to use), and combined with some cumbersome CD players it's even worse than having an mp3 with music.
@cameronwhitaker35094 жыл бұрын
Love your video! I grew up at the very end of the cassette tape era. I was one of those people who thought that cassettes suck compared to CDs, but I could only afford cassettes... Took me a while to realize that cassettes can sound amazing! Back when I truly started getting into cassettes in the 1990s, they had already started to go downhill and were getting hard to find. Not too long ago, I found a Marantz single cassette deck for all of $10.99 at the local Goodwill thrift store. I brought it home and decided to have some fun with it. Didn't take much to get it running. I'll say that just recording some cheezy KZbin audiophile records onto a NOS Maxell Type II cassette revealed just how good these things can sound, even without the appropriate equipment!
@SendyTheEndless8 жыл бұрын
2:17 I'm getting that new catalogue smell just looking at this. Ahh, the excitement, the possibilities, the christmas. Looking at all the latest toys, hi-fi equipment, keyboards and games machines... so much fun!
@RCAvhstape9 жыл бұрын
My strategy was to buy my favorite albums on vinyl and make cassette recordings of them to listen to in portable players or in the car stereo. Vinyl tended to be abused less often that way, too. Nowadays I do the same thing with vinyl or CDs, using mp3s for portability.
@RCAvhstape9 жыл бұрын
+Helium Road Excellent video, by the way.
@RCAvhstape8 жыл бұрын
Acci Acci Use your imagination. Your own helium road is however you think it should be.
@RCAvhstape8 жыл бұрын
Acci Acci It doesn't ice up in the winter and no potholes, for starters.
@thetinpin8 жыл бұрын
+Acci Acci ... and there seems to be an endless supply of tierods for my Fords.
@DallasDashcammer8 жыл бұрын
+Helium Road :: I did the same thing and always used metal tapes for my portable copy.
@cynical83303 жыл бұрын
This video makes me so happy. Takes me back to a simpler time in my life.
@lazerlord_lance3 жыл бұрын
I recently got a whole cassette collection plus tape deck and some other equipment from a friend of my parents,who is now around 60 years old, which is why I am finding your videos very interesting to watch right now. Thank you!
@Dewa117Inc3 жыл бұрын
This video had made me revived my teens cassette hobbyist in present modern day. You’re of course a legend.
@smartroadbiker5 жыл бұрын
I got myself a cheap(ish) Sony unit with Dolby S and have been having loads of fun making my own tapes from soundtracks that I get with many of my computer games. Up to about 25 now! I have got all my tapes from Tapeline to custom lengths and in a variety of different coloured shells. Tapeline are fantastic, I'll order 7 to 10 tapes at a time, each different lengths and they are nothing but prompt with the order! Of course none of the tapes I made have inlays or stickers for the tapes, so I spent some time making a template for the inlays and made my own using graphics from searching on the web. It has been great fun doing this and the recordings, using Tapelines 'Super Ferric' tape along with Dolby S and the Sony units calibration has given recordings that are great to listen to! No practical but I now have a lovely collection of tapes that I can look at (and listen to!) knowing they are all my own hard work. Plus the collection looks great in my custom designed 3D printed racks :D
@SassyXR6007 Жыл бұрын
I used to hate cassettes....the hiss, the rewinding and fast forwarding, the chew, the wear and tear. But I've come to love them now! Very interesting and rewarding. A vintage deck is absolutely awesome to play them on. I like to watch the music not just hear it.
@continentalgin2 жыл бұрын
I love the fact that it's just for fun. I used to use cassette decks in the 70's and 80's and loved making mix tapes. I've been rebuilding my record collection after the vinyl resurgence and a friend is all back into cassettes. I may take the plunge and get a machine off eBay. I've been thinking 'what's the point?' But as you say, fun is the point and a bit of nostalgia.
@TestTubeBabySpy6 жыл бұрын
I used tape WAY into the cd era. I actually built a rig that could clean the tape itself because i had a habit of spilling pepsi in my tapes and carrying them in my sticky back pac. The rig would pull the tape across a series of sponges with dilute IPA and a dry sponge and a fan and wind it back onto the take-up reel. saved many tapes that way...and still have them!
@TheBozeman336 жыл бұрын
TestTubeBabySpy that's so awesome. Never knew that existed. Glad I found your comment. :)
@bradleyhove41776 жыл бұрын
You got blueprints for this thing please?
@GingerNingerGames6 жыл бұрын
That sounds like something I need for all of my Dads old Rum and coke soaked tapes from when he'd throw parties in his younger years. They still play, but there's some mad muffling in places.
@Borals5 жыл бұрын
Dr_Darkly what are you talking about
@eternalchild34285 жыл бұрын
@@Borals Dr_Darkly meant that figuratively, not literally, I presume. His post should have ran thus wise: Although it sounds implausible, it is very possible to record both sides of a single full-length album on side A of a 90min. cassette and then repeat the same procedure by recording both sides of a SECOND full-length album on side B of that same 90min. cassette. Interestingly enough, I would wisely record both sides of a single(1) full-length album on both A AND B sides of an 90min. cassette! Please don't ask the ensuing inevitable question. 😳😥😰😞
@VE6XTC3 жыл бұрын
I'm a HUGE fan of cassette tapes. Properly cared for, they can last for decades. I'm listening to my collection of commercially-made and home tapes. They all sound good and rarely do they get eaten by the machine. One good thing is that a person can wind the tape into the machine and continue listening. One scratch on a CD and it's toast.
@GS-md1ex Жыл бұрын
Yeah, the only thing you gotta really worry about with tapes is magnets, even if the tape snaps it can be spliced back together.
@Honigball Жыл бұрын
Also, cassettes are more robust then CDs. Even though, I was born in late 2004, I got my audio plays in the form of cassettes until about 2008. CDs are just so extremely fragile in the hands of a careless child. I dont know the amount of CDs I killed, just because I forgot to put them back into the cover.
@spikespa52087 ай бұрын
For whatever reason, never had as many cassettes die in a hot car as CDs.
@davidparkland46815 жыл бұрын
I’m 50 years old and I still think you sound like my dad! Keep it up :)
@herrbonk36353 жыл бұрын
No offense, but to me, he sounds like a school yard bully. (Actually have problems with a bunch of british sociolects. People like Richard Dawkins or Stephen Fry sound friendly though, in my scandinavian ears.)
@bumblethebeadle35042 жыл бұрын
So glad I found this channel. Takes me waaaaay back to when making tapes may have been the only real talent I ever possessed. Still have boxes and boxes of cassettes.
@mosespray45104 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for another excellent and informative video! From the late 70's through the early 90's I always had and used a cassette recorder in my component audio system, probably because my dad was an audiophile and I viewed it as a necessity of life. In 1983 I remember buying a couple of commercially produced cassette "albums" and being very disappointed with the quality of not just the tape, but the cassette itself, and the box it came in. Nearly every cassette I listened to back then was recorded by me from vinyl, and it was really clear that the cassettes you could buy to make your own recordings were of much higher quality than the pre-recorded ones. You've taught me a lot right here about cassette technology, and I must admit that at the time I often bought metal tapes, but I didn't really understand why they were better.
@supercrazydogs13127 жыл бұрын
Always loved the way bass sounds on cassettes, smooth and dynamic...
@pramilagupta61766 жыл бұрын
Right
@user-us6ij2gt1v6 жыл бұрын
Agreed very noticeable on a decent hi-fi system
@finscreenname5 жыл бұрын
Back in the day the day I opened a album I would record it on cassette tape.
@mosespray45104 жыл бұрын
Me too.
@draxlerchronicles58514 жыл бұрын
@@electrictroy2010 Surely they only get scratched if you mistreat them? I've got vinyl and CD's from 25 years ago that are as pristine as the day they were bought. I must admit to being somewhat fanatical about taking care of my stuff, but it isn't hard.
@orionbennett73433 жыл бұрын
I did as well ... Led Zeppelin 'Houses of the Holy' bought new in 1973 has been played twice. Recorded both times.
@hanslogg3 жыл бұрын
@@electrictroy2010 may i know, how do we record it to the cassettes ?
@LKonstantina9153 жыл бұрын
Im 18 years old but I still used my grandma's cassettes when I was little... Old technology is just so much nostalgia for me...
@verastaki2 жыл бұрын
I love Audio Compact Cassette Tapes more than I like people. They never talk back to me, never make me mad, never rip me off, never lie to me. Cassette Tapes play me my best music and bring my mood up. Cassettes are awesome! They come in different colours, types, brands, (hundreds of brands). My cassette collection keeps growing
@Jimbos21st2 жыл бұрын
I've got Iron Maiden Number of the Beast on cassette and gave it a spin. The bass still pumps and the solos still soar.
@TheSlugJones8 жыл бұрын
Dang. That Dolby S with the metal tape was pretty quiet.
@InflatablePlane7 жыл бұрын
Slug Jones dbx NR is strangely quiet too.
@hawaiisteve9323 жыл бұрын
I got back into Cassette tapes by accident , I'm English but now retired to Hawaii , on Craiglist I found a JVC KD-S201 that was brand new & unused still in the original bag with paper over the front and the polystyrene packing ( the box was long gone ( rotted away apparently ) . I have a 1970 BMW 2002 here so I found a Sony TC-20 cassette player for the car, when it arrived it too was unused !! I even found the correct parcel shelf speakers . I'm having fun making mix tapes from old singles & albums for the car , re living my youth back in Solihull . Thanks for a brilliant channel I'm having fun catching up with the vintage Hi Fi Set ups . Aloha from Kona Hawaii .
@FirestormAudio8 жыл бұрын
Your stereo set up is amazing.
@scaryboi28975 жыл бұрын
Cassettes are so satisfying to collect and listen to. Starting my collection in 2019 ✌
@smugglersrun77795 жыл бұрын
I started collecting them 12 years ago now have 500 most cost 25 cents each l now have a great collection l could never afford when l was a teenager so happy 😀
@Bartonovich525 жыл бұрын
Not really. I still have some cassettes because I still have a tape player in my 2001 minivan. The best part about them is they can live in a glove box or on the floor or dashboard and still play fine when CDs will be scratched and cracked and skipping.
@VictorGarcia-uh6yk5 жыл бұрын
Smugglers Run o actually started my collection in 2019
@JRSanchez935 жыл бұрын
@Ty Thomas Boxing Training thrift shops mostly. I don't collect them unless it's something I really want (I'm a CD collector myself) but I've seen tape go for 5 for a dollar multiple times at my locals Goodwill's, salvation army, value village and random other ones.
@Cotystevens5 жыл бұрын
I started with cassette movie soundtracks and now I just have random music and such
@Cleric7755 жыл бұрын
Cassettes are Serial Access Memory. Much like the scrolls back then, before pages are made to be binded into books.
@JasonThorneMagicLAMP2 жыл бұрын
The advantage with recording with cassette is there is no processing delay (or lag), recording is simple, and you don't have to be blinded by a bright animated graphical user interface and exposed to its radiation. I work as a full stack developer, and when I am not working, I want all computers, mobile phones and things that go beep turned off.
@Bruh-zx2mc Жыл бұрын
Is your name Chuck McGill by any chance?
@speedfreakpsycho6 жыл бұрын
I watch this video once in every 6 months, just for the nostalgia.
@DoktorKoch6 жыл бұрын
:-)
@TheSannukas6 жыл бұрын
Me too, must be over 5 times now but perhaps even over shorter periods than you
@ash_aiden6 жыл бұрын
I have watched this video many times because there isn't any good cassette videos on KZbin.
@chemosanchezz5 жыл бұрын
Aiden 21 ikr
@davidrapalyea77275 жыл бұрын
I still miss the top end cassette that died a few years ago. I used it to record half speed master recordings. The little cassettes are small enough to put in a shirt pocket. And the early CDs were almost universally mass market source material that sounded like JC Penny bargain bin. Mobile Fidelity Sound Labs might have sold CD versions but all us audiophiles hated the new format. Eventually we got SACD. Nakamichi Dragon was the most famous and sells today $1500-$2500. That reminds me. Back in 1983 I bought a vinyl MFSL UHQR limited edition (5000) Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band as an investment for $55.00 and sold it two years ago for just under $900!
@Evaldas5214 жыл бұрын
Haven't used casettes in a long time but still remember the smell of when you open the cassette player 😬
@polmartin144 жыл бұрын
Or when purchase new tapes... I remember that smell too! 🙂📼
@Lanny6154 жыл бұрын
I still have and use my cassette collection in a portable deck and plugged into a surround sound system.
@AfferbeckBeats8 жыл бұрын
We were still listening to cassettes in Australia well into the early 2000s, mostly because they were still cheaper than the CD versions as said in the video. Pretty crazy when you think about it because CDs are just slapped out pieces of plastic but cassettes are many pieces of plastic and moving parts. I never bought many tapes personally but I definitely owned a Greenday and an Offspring album. Tapes were used a lot in school for educational material as well as fun activities that were set to music and whatnot. CDs were becoming common for this purpose but we were still using a lot of tapes into the early 00s. They were also used for school projects that required recording interviews and that sort of thing. I remember using an early cheap MP3 player that I got for my birthday for this purpose around 2006. I recorded a lot of music and interviews from the radio onto cassette, using I'm sure the cheapest tapes available on my cheap CD/cassette stereo. That was really the only way to listen to songs you liked at leisure without having to go and buy it yourself unless you happened to have fast enough internet to pirate an MP3, which I didn't in my rural town. I guess today's equivalent is listening to an uploaded version on KZbin instead of using an official streaming service or buying a digital copy. I didn't know about all these different types of tapes and that the noise reduction could be so dramatic. Being such a retro thing now, it's the hiss that people actually want, rather than want to remove!
@brandoncallahan92894 жыл бұрын
As a reasonably young person, I'm still amazed that I went to school with people that have never seen or don't even know what cassettes are (in the grade I was in, and grades below me).
@skyrocketautomotive3 жыл бұрын
I know it's been a year but reading your comment reminded me of someone referring to a floppy disc as a 'save logo thing' a while ago, blew my mind 🤣
@brandoncallahan92893 жыл бұрын
@@skyrocketautomotive I've felt the same way about the same thing, maybe growing up poor and with 20 year old tech wasn't too bad after all XD
@tunaburnak56503 жыл бұрын
@@brandoncallahan9289 Honestly I think growing up listening to cassette tapes (and vinyl for me, I'm an '07 kid) was absolutely worth it. Probably sparked my interest in older music, electronics and mechanics
@brandoncallahan92893 жыл бұрын
@@tunaburnak5650 Same here but 2002 instead, if you can afford it, hifi equipment is an amazing hobby to get into. I just bought a Kenwood KA-5700 from 1978 and I couldn't be happier.
@mdesm20055 жыл бұрын
Record a pure sine wave from 20Hz to 20Khz, and show the Fourier transform of the play back. That would show you where the distortion occurs for different types.
@D0nCab8 жыл бұрын
Kids today will never know the joy of impressing a girl by making her a mix tape. Putting serious thought into what songs they might like, lining up all the tracks (many of which were recorded from the radio on a scattershot of different cassettes), figuring out the playlist order and sitting for hours and really listening to the tape you were making were all magical musical experiences that i'm genuinely sad that people dont get to experience any more.
@v.bright71237 жыл бұрын
check out bandcamp.com /countvaseline. I believe yo no soy marinero is a mixtape to his city, fans, friends, and family . first offered as limited edition cassette and now cd
@Certifiable7 жыл бұрын
Santos Jezebel Some sites try to capture the soul, making simulated mixtapes. You can also get tape shells with USB drive middles, you pop out the USB, fill it with music, put it back, then do the jacket like it's 1992!
@matthewrichards887 жыл бұрын
Santos Jezebel I did this too (I used to add my voice and add a soppy love message. I cringe when I think about it!)
@cybercat15317 жыл бұрын
Mixtapes are totally still a thing. As strong as always. Also more commonly referred to as playlists now. It's just become easier to do and doesn't involve actual tapes. :D
@matthewrichards887 жыл бұрын
CatSay do people still put there voice on the playlists ?
@30mmBalistic7 жыл бұрын
The worst (and also the greatest) thing about cassettes was having to manually push FFW or RWD to get the song you were looking for. This lead to making you listen to songs that you didn't necessarily like...they would eventually grow on you and become your favorites.
@flutch12846 жыл бұрын
They are sexy
@rokor35786 жыл бұрын
For sure
@mikeday623 жыл бұрын
I listened to cassettes for many years, and still own 2 high quality Yamaha decks. I rarely used the Dolby NR because (in spite of Dolby's good intentions) it always blocked out the higher frequencies. The hiss was never bad enough to bother me while playing pop and rock music.
@mihaiirimia70912 жыл бұрын
Did you played tapes of 120 minutes?
@TheFatAndTheFurious2 жыл бұрын
Yes, though only true if the recording was NOT made with a particular Dolby NR on. Dolby S was stunning, and a game changer, but just came too late. Just imagine if ALL TAPES since the beginning of the medium had been metal tapes, and Dolby S was present as the default on all recordings! :)
@wyldebill41785 жыл бұрын
Never hear again: “I made you a tape”
@feywerfolevado62865 жыл бұрын
Wylde Bill not if you’re part of the “cassette culture” :) It’s very much alive and well~
5 жыл бұрын
I'd rather hear: I bought this pendrive, and filled it with tunes I'm sure you'll love!"
@oldpaint91374 жыл бұрын
Wylde Bill Hey man , I burned a cd for ya. 👍
@UrOpinionsSucc4 жыл бұрын
@ tape has a different feel to it. A pen drive is cool, but it doesn't have the same feeling tapes give you.
@deserteddave15963 жыл бұрын
@@UrOpinionsSucc Or a 33 1/3 LP. Remember the crackle & pop?
@XtrAMassivE9 жыл бұрын
My sister was crazy with buying empty cassettes and recording radio music. Me on the other hand, I was recording myself making stupid noises and making idiot out of myself. Weirder it was, funnier it was.
@TimoOnline9 жыл бұрын
+XtrAMassivE Funny noises. Still have some of those :)
@Fuzy2K9 жыл бұрын
+XtrAMassivE I was the same way when I got a microcassette recorder when I was a kid. I used to do things like record on a low speed and play it back on normal speed so I would sound like a chipmunk. I would also warp my voice by jiggling the pause switch back and forth. :P
@XtrAMassivE9 жыл бұрын
***** I did the exact same thing ahaha
@parnellitube9 жыл бұрын
+XtrAMassivE Ha ha. Somewhere there's a pile of 35 year old cassette tapes with 40 hours of me making fart noises.
@TheKebair9 жыл бұрын
+XtrAMassivE I never really recorded much "regular" music off the radio, but I did religiously record the Dr. Demento Show.
@appenginenode5 жыл бұрын
Just came onto your channel by accident (although I've recently got into tapes again, nothing to play them on!) - it's interesting about the dolby types, I didn't realise even back in the day there were different types, and you had to record with the switch on and play back with the SAME dolby setting! The Brasso tip was amazing, I'm one of the two people left who didn't know about that trick. Fascinating video, and as someone else said, a really comfy channel.
@mosespray45104 жыл бұрын
Everything you said, me too!
@ANALOGUEAVENGER3 жыл бұрын
Dear Tape Lovers, Greetings from India. Middle aged or senior citizens who are tape addicts will appreciate and comprehend that the analogue tapes from BASF, TDK, SONY & AXIA if recorded from good source and on a decent tape deck from Technics (965, AZ7, TR777 & 979), Nakamichi (DR-10) and Sony (ES) series (I have such models) may easily surpass the vinyl any day. Using a recording for commercial use may be a crime but for personal use has always been legal. Agreed, that a tape recording can never sound better than source but the ability of tapes to be recorded in limitless options can satisfy the appetite of most demanding audiophiles. Settings of Bias, Treble and Vocals is limitless with a good tape deck and if you may get hold of some good DAC such as RME DAC ADI-2 FS or a streamer like new Arcam ST60, try recording a contemporary track and you will be stunned with the output of a Chrome or Metal tapes. The hiss is what makes it special, but if you scorn the same, playing tape on any good deck, even without any sound suppressing options such as Dolby or DBX, the hiss sound is nearly non-existent. Music sounds more melodic and warmer on tape, more than vinyl. Not that vinyl is bad either. They both are tangible and much warmer compared to best digital music from any digital source. All you need is some good money and some luck to find a tape deck and invest a little in blank tapes, what you will hear will certainly make you realise, what you have been missing in music so far in life. Long Live Tape and Long Live Music.
@remixandkaraoke5 жыл бұрын
I second what LGR said. I have grown to totally love this channel! I learn so much and it's just so laid back and cool. The puppets are really fun too!
@prodigalretrod5 жыл бұрын
Ashamed to say I lived through that entire era without ever knowing about type I/II/III/IV.
@sandakureva4 жыл бұрын
Yeah all my tapes were the light brown ones. I had no idea there were other kinds too.
@laranaarana6 жыл бұрын
I still have and use the tape deck I bought around 1998. Radio Shack's Optimus Professional Series SCT-57. Is a Full Logic Control Dual Stereo Cassette Deck with Dolby B/C/S NR HX PRO. It also has Super Auto BLE-XD (Computerized Sound Enhancement System). I always used Type II Chrome or Type IV Metal tapes when recording my favorite music on this unit. I still have some Radio Shack Metal tape Type II MS-X tapes, and they still sound as good as when I recorded them at the turn of the century.
@p5eudo8833 жыл бұрын
Such a fascinating look at something I took for granted in my childhood. I remember tuning into my favorite radio station and waiting, hoping my favorite songs would come on so I could record them on a cassette tape. I had cheap quality machines, for the most part. And I did encounter the stuck tape problem a few times. I do not miss seeing the messes of tape on the side of the road all the time. But I do kind of miss the joy of placing a cassette into a hinged slot, closing it, and pressing a big, fat silver/chrome button to play it. Well, kinda. Tapes were definitely cool.
@00bean002 жыл бұрын
Opening of b2tf haha
@edjohnson21922 жыл бұрын
At the tail end of my cassette era, I used to record in DBX from CDs on Metal tapes using a high end Onkyo home tape deck. Played the back in my car using a top of the line Concord HPL-550 AM/FM/Cassette automotive stereo. They sounded SO good! When selecting the Noise Reduction, Dolby B removed some hiss, Dolby C, even more hiss, then the DBX virtually eliminated it. Near silence. Bass and high end sound was CD quality. I feel the bass was even better. Without the DBX on, the tape sounded all high end. Couldn't listen to these tapes on just any deck. Couldn't even compensate with an EQ either. Not much bass at all and super tinny high end, but all that changed after the short pause when activating the DBX switch. Loved them and actually miss them a little. All my tapes and decks are long gone. Went down the CD path like everyone else. Almost went DAT, but wa s way to expensive back in the early 90s. DAT decks cost about $1000. Never heard a Dolby S recording though. Wonder how it compared to the DBX. If anyone knows, let me know please. I also love your channel Tech Moan dude. Keep 'em coming and thanks for all the tours down Memory Lane.
@rsd37195 жыл бұрын
Magnetic tapes Cassette's and VHS, where extremely durable. In my experience CD's became too scratched up and unusable after a while; you could punt a tape down the stairs and it would mock you all the way down, then play for another decade.
@Bartonovich525 жыл бұрын
Unless the tape got out and tangled.
@faceplants25 жыл бұрын
I remember the replay quality got quite bad on most of my favorite cassettes. It may have been a crappy player in addition to the tape degrading. CDs were fragile in a diferent way and arguably were much easier to render unplayable if you abused them.
@faceplants25 жыл бұрын
@mxt mxt ?? I said 'were' and I meant CDs when I mentioned them. I was contrasting them with cassettes like the OP was.
@rsd37195 жыл бұрын
@mxt mxt fuck off
@faceplants25 жыл бұрын
@@rsd3719 He's alright it's just our friendly neighborhood grammar police who happened to hallucinate the typos he thought he was correcting.
@Desi-qw9fc5 жыл бұрын
Your tape machine looks so good playing the casettes fully visible like that :O
@typografiti2 жыл бұрын
I watched this video again today. Mr. Mat may be you won't even read this comment. Inspired from your videos about cassette tape, the hi-end cassette players and the boom boxes, I decided to get my own tape machine to play my old cassette and record for fun. I managed to get hold of Technics RS-B305. It's from 80s so it's vintage but it sounds really good. Thanks for making awesome videos.
@LucklessGun2 жыл бұрын
as a kid i loved cassettes, and understood from a very young age how to use them and get near CD quality with the right hardware. CD’s had the distinct advantage of picking specific tracks to listen to, but i still preferred Cassettes for portable music. being able to make custom tapes on the fly, even recording from the radio, gave the cassette an edge.
@jessicaladd852 жыл бұрын
Right there with ya!
@CT-hr9nk Жыл бұрын
As a kid I destroyed a lot cassettes without knowing what I was doing, lol. I think I tried eating the tape too one time when I was very, very young, haha. Knew how to use those big vhs tapes but not the lil cassette tapes. Good memories...
@CT-hr9nk Жыл бұрын
I wasn't as smart as you unfortunately. RIP those tapes, hope they weren't anything special.
@DeneF7 жыл бұрын
I was a metal tape guy but some weeks had to go chrome if I hadn't done the required overtime at work to afford the metal. Lol. Many thanks. Took me back.
@stuart14092 жыл бұрын
tapes don't need charged, switched on, loaded, updated. they don't get dusty or scratched you can chuck them across the room without breaking them, they're just cooler all round
@DusterHemi4 жыл бұрын
After buying 500+ cassettes in my lifetime, prerecorded and blanks, I found that the best compromise (in my humble opinion) for home recording from records, tape to tape, radio etc was the TDK SA90X blank tapes. I always got great levels on record and playback, really low background noise. I’m sure that had lots to do with the quality of the recording equipment I used ( which was very good, Sony and Teac tape decks, Nikko receiver, Gerrard z2000b turntable and the first generation of Sony CD player), but I did try all levels of tape brands from type 1 to type 4. At one point I was recording from cd’s to tapes (so I could play them in the car), and at home I could not tell the difference between the two on playback. The difference was so small that people would think I had a CD player in car, which at that time was way too expensive for me to afford. I agree with this video absolutely, tons of great information but like he said, at the end of the day, cassettes are not going to make downloads disappear any time soon...love all the videos for sure, keep them coming!
@anishmistry20677 жыл бұрын
I picked up the hifi system at 12:13 for a mere £31 (minus the speakers) probably the biggest bargain of my life. Sounds incredible!
@electrojones7 жыл бұрын
The best channel on youtube, hands down.
@favorit6014 жыл бұрын
Three heads have a second advantage: The gap in the head is optimized for the specific issue. To playback high treble (15kHz upward) you need a small gap in the head, but for recording you need a recording heads head with a wider gap, otherwise you don‘t get enough magnetic energy to the tape. So with separate heads you can optimize them for both issues.
@weegie33432 жыл бұрын
tree. yes
@malleyland7082 Жыл бұрын
Once you go past 40 odd years old you won't be able to hear above 15khz so doesn't matter.
@favorit601 Жыл бұрын
@@malleyland7082 c‘mon! Phase, linearity! This is not stone age….
@malleyland7082 Жыл бұрын
@@favorit601What you on about
@rockabluesy603 жыл бұрын
Man I just watch this and suddenly the nostalgia strikes on, good childhood moments, rock, punk, blues, and trash metal. Amazing thanks!