Cassettes: EVERYTHING You Know is a LIE!

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Vinyl Eyezz

Vinyl Eyezz

Күн бұрын

🎵 CASSETTE LABELS 🎵
bit.ly/SanityM...
bit.ly/UnitedC...
bit.ly/LostSou...
bit.ly/PostPop...
bit.ly/TapeClu...
bit.ly/BlueTapes
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✅ MY RECORD PLAYER SETUP ✅
Fluance RT85 Turntable: amzn.to/2oys97i
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✅ RECORD PLAYERS I RECOMMEND ✅
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✅ RECORD CLEANING ✅
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Record Needle Brush: amzn.to/3xioFHd
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Пікірлер: 8 600
@vinyleyezz
@vinyleyezz 5 жыл бұрын
🔔 Hit that BELL NOTIFICATION for more sweet ANALOG Videos! 🔔
@dyfanhuws-jones6911
@dyfanhuws-jones6911 5 жыл бұрын
mr eyezz i have a question do they sell tapes at charity shops?
@lovepeaceandsoulfullrighto9053
@lovepeaceandsoulfullrighto9053 5 жыл бұрын
Vinyl Eyezz Don’t know where I’ve been...at 50 and a former 78 rpm owner I cannot believe I ever never seen this. A lover of actual mixtapes, crappy CDs and probably 10 turntables. I was even a spinner in Chicago 1999 with vinyl. Don’t stop the funk rock. Man, I still have some 8 tracks...nothing to play em on but I’m proud to own them. Thank you for the knowledge 🤪
@madbear3512
@madbear3512 5 жыл бұрын
@@lovepeaceandsoulfullrighto9053 If you go to garage sales at leastthe ones I go to there dirt cheap.
@darthjarjar6358
@darthjarjar6358 5 жыл бұрын
I don't think double cassette decks are so bad. I have a technics rs-d190w double deck and it looks and plays great.
@rishanranatunga4851
@rishanranatunga4851 5 жыл бұрын
@joker Darkerdouble decks are great.but head rotating models are given lot of problems with tuning for high frequency response on worn heads due to HQ metal tapes & mechanical wear-age. luckily you have owned equipment of classy user.​
@MGC-1977
@MGC-1977 5 жыл бұрын
I have many great memories involving cassette tapes. I was in high school in 1999, which was when the music industry started really pushing CD's over cassettes. My best friend and I would go to flea markets and garage sales, find tons of tapes, and say "How much for all of them?" We put ALL tapes in a huge plastic bag and then, whilst driving, one of us would shout "New tape" and then I (because I wasn't driving) would reach into the bag (without looking) and pick a new tape. It was awesome. We'd go from Adam & The Ants, to Johnny Cash, to The Bangles, etc. Yes, you can do this with mp3's, but it doesn't feel magical 😔
@tedlyra7820
@tedlyra7820 Жыл бұрын
Yea, there's something about hearing the soft rattely sound in your hand as you take that small yet sturdy plastic container and place it in your player and then hearing the closing of the lid as well as hearing the clackity adjustment sounds that align each reel and finally the click of the play button. I think this ritual plays an important part in the nostalgia and magical feeling we cassettorists experience.
@up0820
@up0820 9 ай бұрын
1999 they weren't pushing them then, they were more than mainstream by that time, if anything was being pushed at that time it was home computers and the internet. You were way behind the times, sorry to say.
@MGC-1977
@MGC-1977 9 ай бұрын
@@up0820 You completely misunderstood my post - please read it again.
@etchatails
@etchatails Ай бұрын
@@up0820bruh liked his own comment 💀
@Pidalin
@Pidalin 26 күн бұрын
good old days, I also loved to explore random CDs or floppys with software or games, sometimes it was virus, but who cares, I was reinstalling Win 98 almost every week anyway 😀
@mkx200sx
@mkx200sx 5 жыл бұрын
I cant wait when he discovers CD
@paulalverson7211
@paulalverson7211 5 жыл бұрын
😅
@nickhill8612
@nickhill8612 5 жыл бұрын
@@paulalverson7211 Haha yes
@HaraldSjellose
@HaraldSjellose 5 жыл бұрын
hahaha
@nickhill8612
@nickhill8612 5 жыл бұрын
@@HaraldSjellose And blue ray and high definition
@nickhill8612
@nickhill8612 5 жыл бұрын
@Sweatshirt Yes your right about that.
@astrosjer822
@astrosjer822 5 жыл бұрын
Long live physical media-CD’s, Vinyl and cassettes.
@oldgamecafe
@oldgamecafe 5 жыл бұрын
Same too, i hate specially streamimg music services
@EffoVexx
@EffoVexx 5 жыл бұрын
Aldo Reyes you're telling me you hate convenient and instantaneous music at the tips of your fingertips? Aight. Hope you're just trolling with that comment but knowing society today I wouldn't be surprised if people genuinely think Streaming audio is worse than physical media
@coreyfellows9420
@coreyfellows9420 5 жыл бұрын
@@EffoVexx u clearly don't get it.
@coreyfellows9420
@coreyfellows9420 5 жыл бұрын
@Sam Saoulekinda like your parents.... When they had you
@LilPistachiofr
@LilPistachiofr 5 жыл бұрын
Long live!
@loringmccrorey5122
@loringmccrorey5122 4 жыл бұрын
Tip: Always fast forward or reverse your tapes to the end when done listening to keep tape taunt. This will keep the tape free of whats called "Drop Out" a fluttering sound a wrinkled portion passing over the tape head will make.
@Raidr5
@Raidr5 3 жыл бұрын
@Loring Mc Crorey Thanks for the advice. I'm getting into cassettes and I found a 12 tape collection at my grandparents autorepair shop, and a few tapes had the main tape showing insted of the header, so thanks for the tip!
@markmooch
@markmooch 2 жыл бұрын
I wonder if radio DJs did this
@audvidgeek
@audvidgeek 2 жыл бұрын
@@markmooch radio DJ's typically ran Fidelipac's which were sort of a professional version of 8-tracks. They ran at 7 1/2 ips, and only had 3 tracks. 2 for music, and one double-wide track for control. The control track would stop the tape automatically where cue was placed on the tape.
@nickhaldin8674
@nickhaldin8674 5 жыл бұрын
Most people who say anything about an analog medium “sounding like crap” probably only heard said medium at someone’s house (or their own place) on equipment that wasn’t taken care of properly. Take care of vinyl properly, take care of cassettes properly, they sound great.
@JohnDonovanProductions
@JohnDonovanProductions 4 жыл бұрын
Or it’s just what has become the acceptable response. It’s just ignorance LOL granted there are some sources that are bad quality. But you can’t generalize an entire product :)
@pauldavies8638
@pauldavies8638 4 жыл бұрын
Most people in the day wouldn't clean tape heads, fixing snapped tapes with sellotape was a good one for making the pinch wheels sticky and then the tape would wind around it.
@JohnDonovanProductions
@JohnDonovanProductions 4 жыл бұрын
@@pauldavies8638 oh the horror hahah but that's also how i learned to splice VHS tapes together - essentially I was film cutting :)
@pauldavies8638
@pauldavies8638 4 жыл бұрын
@@JohnDonovanProductions I can put a chrome cassette on my tape player and it is as sharp as a cd, you can't tell the difference
@Raidr5
@Raidr5 2 жыл бұрын
@ Nick Haldin Well said. Also I like that retrowave/outrun pfp of yours.
@skogsgud
@skogsgud 6 жыл бұрын
Keep your cassettes away from magnets
@smartroadbiker
@smartroadbiker 5 жыл бұрын
I experimented as a kid with this. I had an old large speaker with a surprisingly strong magnet and slapped a tape against it, slid it over it and moved it around. Didn't do squat. I'll admit it wasn't a very scientific test (I was only about 14 at the time!) but I do think magnetic storage is more robust then it is sometimes given credit for. Still I wouldn't want to store my tapes near a magnet for any length of time though!!
@kosterix123
@kosterix123 5 жыл бұрын
Simply overwrite.
@Methavn
@Methavn 5 жыл бұрын
too late for me all music is gone
@dotTomT
@dotTomT 5 жыл бұрын
@Duribethin Accidental or not, I never liked Erasure's music.
@ncshuriken
@ncshuriken 5 жыл бұрын
Any responsible music loving parent with kids better make sure to teach them this! Also, don't lean about 20 singles up against a turned on radiator lol.
@lilyg8761
@lilyg8761 4 жыл бұрын
“ ..if you’ve already spent your entire allowance on vinyl” i felt that lol
@gnayr1305
@gnayr1305 5 жыл бұрын
I’m 46 and still have all of my cassettes from the 80’s & 90’s...and I still buy cassettes, along with vinyl and CDs. Simply put, I love music! Rock on! 🤘
@markagnessi4731
@markagnessi4731 Жыл бұрын
Rock on dude!!! 34 here, have a few tapes, cds. and A bunch of records
@drmidnight680-kz2le
@drmidnight680-kz2le 11 ай бұрын
​@@markagnessi4731the only way to go is Reel to reel tapes, believe me.
@pedroguilherme9811
@pedroguilherme9811 6 жыл бұрын
You forgot about the black metal underworld. Tapes are still the media of choice.
@ncshuriken
@ncshuriken 5 жыл бұрын
Yea theres a few niche & underground labels and camps that put music out mostly on tape. The only one I can remember off the top of me head ATM though is "Dirty Tapes" but I don't even know if they're running anymore.
@erwinenwilma
@erwinenwilma 4 жыл бұрын
ncshuriken back from the Grave tapes has Some great tapes for sale
@rudypeni
@rudypeni 3 жыл бұрын
Same with hardcore
@baphomet8638
@baphomet8638 3 жыл бұрын
And there type 1 lol
@DanielQwerty
@DanielQwerty 3 жыл бұрын
@@baphomet8638 type 1 tape isn’t bad it’s just not the best
@TELEVISIONARCHIVES
@TELEVISIONARCHIVES 7 жыл бұрын
I recorded Radio all the time with my cassette player. Little did I know that I would treasure them today with all of the original commercials etc. It's like a time capsule from the 1970's and 1980's.
@pinkfreud62
@pinkfreud62 7 жыл бұрын
Same here! :)
@audiobuff77
@audiobuff77 7 жыл бұрын
I also have a few cassette recordings (early to mid 80's) from my GE boombox that I still listen to today and they sound good.
@WilliamMcCarthyIII
@WilliamMcCarthyIII 7 жыл бұрын
You should upload some of those recordings!
@oberon79
@oberon79 7 жыл бұрын
back in the day: "gotta cut all commercials" today: omg I recorded some old commercials by accident!!!
@alexcncmacsalcar7324
@alexcncmacsalcar7324 7 жыл бұрын
I also used to record songs I liked from the radio. It would've been too expensive to buy all of the records I liked and we were poor (either that or my parents were tight). I guess you could say those were like the music downloads of that time.
@nancybrewer5778
@nancybrewer5778 2 жыл бұрын
I’ve been living in the ‘80s ever since they ended. I won’t give up my physical media: CDs, VHS tapes, and my extensive collection of original cassette tapes. I have an old tape deck and my car is old enough to have a cassette player in it! Thank you for extolling the virtues of cassettes! I knew they had value to someone somewhere. Glad to see they’re being respected again!
@coldguy420ohokay2
@coldguy420ohokay2 5 жыл бұрын
I actually like the shoddier sound, I listen to a lot of lofi genres; hip-hop, vaporwave, future funk. I don’t know why I enjoy lower quality more, maybe it’s the texture? I dunno. But I dig it
@Younas7991
@Younas7991 5 жыл бұрын
coldguyRONE420 Oh, okay same with me I like the way it sounds
@bailey9947
@bailey9947 5 жыл бұрын
I think it depends on the type of music I’m listening to. If I’m listening to older music then I like the lesser quality sound. It just adds to the experience. But if on the off chance I’m listening to something more modern, I usually go digital for a cleaner sound without pops, cracks, and tape hiss. But I rarely listen to modern music so it’s not too often
@andreasklindt7144
@andreasklindt7144 4 жыл бұрын
I usually listen to metal, but from what I know about history of music, cassettes ARE hip hop!! The whole genre of hip hop was born out of the cassette culture and mixtapes! Think about it, in the 80's there was no cheaper way to sample parts of songs together to something new and groovy than through cassettes. That's why the typical 80's ghettoblaster (!) came with two cassette players and microphone jack! Without cassettes Hip Hop would not exist.
@rubenvd3913
@rubenvd3913 4 жыл бұрын
Because it sounds more real. It sounds raw, like real life, not like the cold, clean, compressed, DRM-riddled digital future.
@emmemmemm2360
@emmemmemm2360 3 жыл бұрын
cassettes aren't lower quality. they're not any worse than vinyl or digital.
@cindymananzalamartinez6679
@cindymananzalamartinez6679 5 жыл бұрын
i still keep my father's old cassette tapes from the 80's and 90's... coz its a big part of my childhood
@dotTomT
@dotTomT 5 жыл бұрын
Growing up as a child it was all about watching the VU meters and spectrum analysers that helped you judge how good a stereo system was. That, and also watching the woofers move as you powered up the amplifier. Vinyl was a more sonically engaging medium, but it required a patience & maturity of an audiophile who wasn't as interested in how the mechanisms all worked. Apart from using an LP as a rolling road for your James Bond Matchbox car, there was less stuff visible to keep a child's eyes entertained.
@ncshuriken
@ncshuriken 5 жыл бұрын
Same. Most of my dad and his friends old tape recordings of Reggae, Dub, Techno, Trance, Jungle etc from 80's - 90's radio (or ripped direct from vinyl into "mix tapes" or "custom tape albums") is what became my music taste as a kid. Later I got a huge "music stack" "machine" which was a radio, topped with a twin tape deck, topped with a turntable (but that was already broken) but thats when I first started recordning my own tapes, probz around 10 years old. This thing had the old VU meters too which are always nice to watch. I still haven't chucked any of those tapes away (how could we haha!) or my own, even though the tape deck I own now (an old Technics twin deck) barely works. We got a Tascam PortaStudio at one point and that was great fun to mess with (basically a multi-track tape mixer).
@brianmott728
@brianmott728 5 жыл бұрын
Hi Cindy What do you own on cassette?
@bailey9947
@bailey9947 5 жыл бұрын
cindy mananzala martinez ugh lucky, my parents got rid of all their old cassettes and records.
@brianmott728
@brianmott728 5 жыл бұрын
@@bailey9947 Who was this message above meant to be sent to?
@creakycracker
@creakycracker 7 жыл бұрын
Lemme say this...I was born in 1954. Right now is as good as it will be, I believe. Here's why: 1960-68 I listened to an AM and Shortwave tube radio or 45 Records. Even had a 45 player in the car. Had Turntable and Reel-to- Reel in home. Then I got FM - what a difference. My buddy had a reverb hooked to a speaker in the back - Trippy. Then came STEREO! 1970-80 Got a Muntz Jet 4-Track and later a 8-Track and a recorder for the home. Got rid of Reel-to-Reel and tapes. Made lotsa mixtapes, but the endless loop tapes meant real careful planning to keep the song from getting split between tracks. Got quadraphonic Turntable and car stereo (which never caught on). 1980-90 Got cassettes in car and home and recorded everything over. Kept doing this until CD came out...recorded everything over again. Looked in closet and got rid of all vinyl, 8-track, and cassettes. Amassed several hundred CDs. 2000-2010 Got iPod and PC computer with CD recorder - kept CDs until I put 4 Terrabytes storage on networked drives, recorded everything over to digital. 2010-2016 Got car with mp3 interface for iPod. Got rid of all CDs. I don't know what can come next, but this is as far as I go. I Am now 62 and have every piece of music I have ever owned on my network and am Happy. (I upgraded my music collection like I traded my TRS-80 for an IBM PC, then 20 other computers all the way up to today I have a 4-core and Linux. Technology in media has probably gone as far as it will. I have spent countless man-hours and dollars keeping up and this is where I draw the line.) Thanks for listening.
@apexmike849
@apexmike849 7 жыл бұрын
+David Graham 100% agree. Where audio and video technology is concerned, not upgrading is just plain dumb. I worked in the audio industry in R&D in the 1980s and everything was developed to either be smaller and more convenient, or and this was mostly the case, to improve upon the current noise and distortion figures. For one thing, wow & flutter vanished with the demise of tapes and vinyl. We always had the best stuff to play with and I can tell you that CD was a massive improvement.
@MFXdump
@MFXdump 7 жыл бұрын
David Graham My car stereo has USB. So now days I keep my music on a thumb drive. Maybe where it's headed next. Small compact, portable. Take your whole collection with you. Maybe even have it all stored in flash memory right in the stereo.
@jazzman1626
@jazzman1626 7 жыл бұрын
David Graham If I stuck to what I remember about records, I wouldn't have bought a new turntable because I remembered the clicks, pops and skips as well as the stuck records. Now I have records that are as silent of any of the surface noise that I assumed was part of the medium. I also bought a Sony cassette deck which was made in 1978 and it gives excellent reproduction. Not perfect, which nothing is, but very enjoyable. I still love Spotify but it's taking records out of their sleeves and having to turn them over. It's the larger sized art work on the covers and the whole interaction of flipping through records in record shops and of playing vinyl that makes me prefer it to digital. The same with Cassettes. A portable cassette player damaged tapes and didn't give good reproduction. My "new" cassette deck gives very good sound. Making mixed tapes from records and even Jazz radio is fun. There's more to enjoying music than focussing on the imperfections of the media.
@takaforo
@takaforo 7 жыл бұрын
"There's more to enjoying music than focussing on the imperfections of the media." that statement is made out of the stuff of legends. Well said.
@bayrock1337
@bayrock1337 7 жыл бұрын
Well, thankfully the world hasn't given up like you have. Technology is improving at a faster rate than ever, and I guarantee there are still plenty of improvements you can make to the quality of your music and setup right this moment.
@user-hx9gu5nh9p
@user-hx9gu5nh9p 5 жыл бұрын
From a teen who used cassettes and walkman back in the 90s I think the real problem people have today with digital music and what makes people overglorify obsolete media formats like vinyls and cassettes is that digital music and cloud hosting and streaming basically made the music inexistent, uncollectible, the music in a physical form I mean. I have broken so many cassettes and vinyls I loved just for normal use and back then an album or a single was not a few bucks or 99 cents as today. Sure digital files can get corrupted, a server can be shut down. But you can easily get your tracks quickly and for cheap. I really don't miss the old times. Also, don't even start the argument 'vinyl sound better' if you don't know the difference between Analog and Digital audio. Digital audio is superior. The rest is nostalgia.
@ReneAlexisPenalozaMunoz
@ReneAlexisPenalozaMunoz 4 жыл бұрын
I have a drawer with hundreds of factory and home recorded cassette tapes and recently (well, about two years ago) I upgraded my player to a Pioneer model. Some of the tape sound great while others...not so great. I adjust the levels and balance between lows/highs to my taste with the help of an EQ. Love them.
@nwmonk3105
@nwmonk3105 6 жыл бұрын
I'm 52. Used cassettes forever back in the day. You are correct. A Metal tape has the best fidelity range. I would always buy a brand new vinyl record and record the tape on the very first play. Purchased my first CD player in 85. However even then the studios would record it (SPARS code) Analog Analog Digital. Wasn't until about 87 when CDs were recorded Digital Digital Digital. Unlike most millennials, my music library has gone through SEVERAL format changes over the decades.
@nonyabiz62
@nonyabiz62 5 жыл бұрын
That is the best way to treat your vinyl, but DAT has got to be the best tape format ever created. If you've never recorded onto dat you'll never know high grade Recordings. The music industry loved using dat but hated the public getting a hold of it.
@wideyxyz2271
@wideyxyz2271 5 жыл бұрын
I did the same
@noiselabproject9659
@noiselabproject9659 5 жыл бұрын
​@@nonyabiz62 although Dat is just a storage medium for a digital recording, usually at about the same rate as a CD. There is no warm harmonic distortion/saturation that is present in an analog tape or vinyl. We used DAT for the mixdown at my studio in the early 90`s as we didn`t have CDRs yet, they were very convienient and all the Mastering places could easily use those from us but we used 2 inch reel to reel for the original multi track recordings. These days many of us are using all digital at a higher bitrate than CD or dat was inside computers like Pro Tools DAW however we also use tape/tube saturation plug ins within the DAW to inject some analog warmth back into the tracks and because we are using such a high digital resolution to make the music then the plug ins can do a really good job of emulating the analog sound
@UncleKennysPlace
@UncleKennysPlace 5 жыл бұрын
@@noiselabproject9659 "warm harmonic distortion/saturation" can be added is desired, as you note. However, if the analog record/playback mechanisms are adding it due to their limitations, then it's not part of the music.
@chuheihkg
@chuheihkg 4 жыл бұрын
it is mainly about demand. when more people prefer that way, these sellers will find a way to make something smaller.
@jefferylarson3218
@jefferylarson3218 7 жыл бұрын
To really enjoy cassettes, you do not need be as nerdy as this guy. I've been around since the first cassette PLAYER - not deck, which came later. Points I make: 1. I agree: cassettes sound great. 2. You do NOT need a 3-head deck to enjoy cassettes. A 2-head deck sounds just as good. You only need a 3-head deck if you are going to attempt serious recording. 3. Used cassette decks may have a well worn head. So like your stylus for vinyl, they need to be replaced. Or the deck replaced. 4. Dolby S is NOT required. Tapes made with Dolby S are not compatible with nay other player. You need an S player. Dolby S would be for your personal collection. See item 2 above. 5. Most "newer" decks have iron based heads and they wear out. See above. METAL tape wears 'em out faster than anything else. 6. Use Chrome tape - best compromise and everything supports it. Chrome recordings sound outstanding. FeCr tape were made because Chrome tapes didn't sound quite like vinyl sources whereas the Fe tapes sounded more natural but were noisier. FeCr tapes make great recordings, and an be played on chrome compatible decks. You owe it to yourself to try it. 7. The tape transport counts. Maybe MORE than the electronics or number of heads. You need a solid performer with low W&F as well as steady long term W&F performance. Most decks W&F are different at the beginning, middle and end of tape. It takes some solid engineering to get this right. So if your deck has a flywheel the size of a silver dollar, you need a new deck. 8. Ferrite heads: Plenty of pro and con about this. But the main advantage is with a ferrite head, you have a chance the unit will meet original spec. This head will easily outlast 2 or 3 main belt changes. Think 30+ years. 9. Finally: If you buy a deck from 1990-1995 it is going to need belts. At least the main belt. Even un-used, these belts soften, sag and even melt. Not like the 1970-1986 belts, which were made from real rubber component chemicals. 1990's belts are much cheaper, although that is less a worry in better quality decks.
@JoeJ-8282
@JoeJ-8282 6 жыл бұрын
Jeffery Larson; Some good points there! W&F standing for "Wow & Flutter", which was basically how stable the deck could hold the proper speed of 1-7/8 inches per second, and that stability was helped greatly by having a large flywheel attached to the capstan... Again, terminology that can only be understood if you know about the format... Anyone interested in cassettes now-a-days who doesn't already know about the format needs to do their own "homework" and research on it before just jumping into using it, because without proper knowledge and understanding on how the format best works and how to get the most out of it, they will most likely be quite disappointed and consider it "too much trouble to be worth their time"!... But with proper knowledge and understanding it doesn't have to be like that, as it can be quite fun and enjoyable if utilized properly!
@labnine3362
@labnine3362 2 жыл бұрын
Yes. Everything Jeffery said is true!!! Though it's incredibly difficult and expensive to find good chrome tapes these days. Older TDK D and Sony HF are good enough for most uses if you are using a good deck. But there's nothing like a TDK SA-X if you can afford it. :)
@jefferylarson3218
@jefferylarson3218 2 жыл бұрын
@@labnine3362 Sony HF. I use it a lot. Great natural sound. TDK SA: probably the best tape ever made.
@mikebrown9412
@mikebrown9412 5 жыл бұрын
I'm 64 and I well remember cassettes. I also remember that anything I recorded myself from my own records (vinyl) was always much better than what was then available as prerecorded stuff in the stores. There was a lot of "cheep junk" prerecorded cassettes back then.
@joshuafrias2415
@joshuafrias2415 Жыл бұрын
0:30 That "MERRRRR..." I'm sorry, that makes me chuckle so much.
@tto0508
@tto0508 Жыл бұрын
MERRRR interjection An expression regarding extreme anger
@markrushton63
@markrushton63 7 жыл бұрын
Been there!Done that!!Spent 10s of 1000s of $$$ Doing it!!I ain't going back!Hell NO!!!The new Digital/Internet Age has expanded my Collection with Superior Sound at Minimal Cost!!Also ,so much quicker!Used to spend Hours doing what now takes Seconds!!No.Sorry!I can't go back!! ;)
@andreworr7366
@andreworr7366 7 жыл бұрын
DjCole100 so so wish I still had my vynil and my tapes man! Worst thing, in fact also stupidest thing I ever did was sell my album collection and go to cds
@donalso
@donalso 7 жыл бұрын
me too. that was a sad day in retrospect.
@stp479
@stp479 7 жыл бұрын
DjCole100 What does " i should have ripped them to wave" mean? Another format?
@neilcoo
@neilcoo 7 жыл бұрын
.wav is lossless but also uncompressed. You're far better off using FLAC. Its also truly lossless but compressed (just not as much as MP3).
@Assimilator702
@Assimilator702 7 жыл бұрын
Mark Rushton Actually an MP3 isn't compressed. It's recoded and bits of information are tossed out. A lossless FLAC file is simply squeezed down for storage and unsqueezed for playback. Sorry I stopped buying cassettes in 1987 and don't plan on ever going down that road again. It's MUCH more logical and economical to buy hard drive space. A 4 TB WD BLUE costs $118.
@IFrancyISantosI
@IFrancyISantosI 8 жыл бұрын
my car still has a casette player..
@bluesytrigger5954
@bluesytrigger5954 8 жыл бұрын
If I have a car, It'd have one as well.
@Dan_druft
@Dan_druft 8 жыл бұрын
When you get a job you can buy a newer car with a CD/MP3 player
@bluesytrigger5954
@bluesytrigger5954 8 жыл бұрын
Dan Druft No my dear, thanks! I deliver pizza!
@Dan_druft
@Dan_druft 8 жыл бұрын
+Bluesy Trigger wow you will be managing director soon and will have a DVD player in your Range Rover
@mikemac2888
@mikemac2888 8 жыл бұрын
Bought a used car, turned the key and drove away. Six months later I was putting a parking garage ticket in the center console and found out it has a 6-disc changer in it (factory). Still haven't put anything in it...
@petermitchell6348
@petermitchell6348 5 жыл бұрын
In the seventies Phil Spector had a slogan: 'Back to Mono'. I think we should start a slogan 'Back to Analog'.
@bustanut8315
@bustanut8315 5 жыл бұрын
Hell yeah!
@suncookrocks
@suncookrocks 4 жыл бұрын
Back to Morse Code
@SomeAngryGuy1997
@SomeAngryGuy1997 3 жыл бұрын
@@suncookrocks *laughs in smoke signals*
@Lunarsight
@Lunarsight 3 жыл бұрын
In terms of wear and tear, I find the one thing with cassettes is they're more adversely impacted by extreme temperatures. Also, don't accidentally drop them into cans of paint. (My Smashing Pumpkins - Gish tape met its untimely demise that way.)
@youtubepotatoe6685
@youtubepotatoe6685 7 жыл бұрын
I think you have overlooked this point: cassettes are susceptible to heat, dust, moisture, magnetism and wear and tear.
@ryank5613
@ryank5613 7 жыл бұрын
or ffd, rew, shuffle LOL No, you would have to be a complete moron to switch back to cassettes. CD's, not being great because of its generally poor ability to reproduce an analog signal, still sound better than the mass produced junk that was released to the general public - CDs sound the same time after time after time after time after time after time after time after time after time after time after time...
@somerandomgamer3488
@somerandomgamer3488 7 жыл бұрын
KZbin Potatoe I live in a desert 95 degrees if I'm lucky all my tapes are fine
@Synthematix
@Synthematix 7 жыл бұрын
And cds rot
@quantumleap359
@quantumleap359 7 жыл бұрын
+Synthematix Not mine. Got 3500 of them, some 34 years old, no problem with any of them. I call BS. Now, the recordable ones are problematic, and do fail rather quickly, but not the commercially pressed ones.
@Synthematix
@Synthematix 7 жыл бұрын
I have had 1 in 15 rot, shop bought ones aswell, cds are too fragile as a format, im tempted to say minidisc are better
@philhunter8263
@philhunter8263 8 жыл бұрын
Oh my dear lord. It's the wisdom of the ancients. You don't think there were hi-end cassette decks 'back in the day'? There were, such as the Nakamichi Dragon,etc., but who's kidding who about any of them sounding 'fantastic', or 'amazing', compared to even red-book digital. I don't miss the noise, the gradual degradation, the high-end roll-off, the inconvenience, the mechanical wear on the machine itself. I've owned lot's of the things, and still have one that works well despite being sourced from a free pile, but honestly, I don't miss them. Buy a cheap digital recorder. Revel in the silence, the headroom, and the wide, flat frequency response. And the Earth is ROUND!!!!
@jimmyparris9892
@jimmyparris9892 8 жыл бұрын
Yep. 10,000 songs in my pocket. Only buying the song that I actually like instead of the whole cassette full of stuff I won't listen to, downloading the song I want immediately, not having to wait to rewind the thing and know exactly where to stop, forgetting to put my collection out of direct sunlight so it won't be destroyed when I get back in my car, the background hiss, Dolby music reduction, metal (The Best) tapes with little to no bass. NO THANK YOU. I'll stick with digital. I have already sold all my cassettes and players. As far as CD's, I haven't bought one in years either. If a so called (Artist) isn't happy that we are only buying 1 song instead of the whole album, then maybe they should create some better music. Yep I'm quite happy with digital.
@mattedj
@mattedj 8 жыл бұрын
I had a nice deck and nice tapes back then too, even my first crappy CD player caused my jaw to drop and music was practically brand new again, I couldn't wait to hear everything I'd once listened to on tape. I understand the nostalgia but when one is old enough to remember reality, tapes were poop: sometimes I even thought 8-track sounded better than cassette but I was pretty young then.
@jimmyparris9892
@jimmyparris9892 8 жыл бұрын
Haha. I've been singing songs using the wrong lyrics for the last 30-35 years because of the poor quality of the system and cassettes that I had. Digital has really opened my eyes.
@mattedj
@mattedj 8 жыл бұрын
TOTALLY relate
@ynnebbenny
@ynnebbenny 8 жыл бұрын
Yep fully agreed, he really oversold redundant technology on this one.
@Kennephone
@Kennephone 2 ай бұрын
My favorite thing to do is find old used blanks that people recorded off the radio, you find all sorts of old DJs and commercials.
@moaningpheromones
@moaningpheromones 2 ай бұрын
upload them if it's not a nightmare job.
@doglix1525
@doglix1525 4 жыл бұрын
CASSETTES DO SOUND VERY GOOD !!! HIS VIDEO WAS 100% TRUE !!!
@PaulGreen11
@PaulGreen11 5 жыл бұрын
I'm "Surfing The Internet." Remember that from the early 2000's... "Surfing The Net?"
@Turrican
@Turrican 8 жыл бұрын
tech moan is great!
@christopheranderson443
@christopheranderson443 8 жыл бұрын
Agree.... I look forward to his vids... have learned a lot from him
@sakadabara
@sakadabara 8 жыл бұрын
He's constantly moaning! But yes, he's great!
@kristina80ification
@kristina80ification 8 жыл бұрын
Technoman sucks, all he ever does is talk about old expensive things and dash cams, what a nerd, lol. ;)
@kristina80ification
@kristina80ification 8 жыл бұрын
***** It was a joke, I would have thought calling him technoman and the wink would have given it away. Bad insulting youtube comments are a running joke in his videos, it was a play on that. I actually am a huge fan of his stuff.
@sakadabara
@sakadabara 8 жыл бұрын
+Kandi Gloss 😜😅😅😜! The video about the how to comment on KZbin is absolute gem!
@Twintania
@Twintania 2 жыл бұрын
I'm glad more people are starting to stand up for cassettes I'm sick of people shitting on the format. I recently bought a pioneer from the late 90s and I was amazed at how my ac/dc tape sounded in it, it sounded great
@drmidnight680-kz2le
@drmidnight680-kz2le 11 ай бұрын
Yeah, but Ac/DC sounds great on anything
@gethighonlife11
@gethighonlife11 3 жыл бұрын
I remember very well when I used to use cassettes. If one bought a prerecorded cassette, most of the time, the record companies used a cheap Type 1 tape. Occasionally, the record label would issue a recording on a Type 2 ( high bias ) tape, i.e., Janet Jackson - Rhythm Nation. Type 3, Ferrochrome was rare, but my brother had recorded an LP to this type of tape for me, so I had one. Type 4, Metal Bias was superior. But one couldn't record Types 2, 3, nor 4 from just any recorder. Usually, the cassette deck would require a position knob for what type of tape you are using. I have noticed that some higher end boom boxes could record type 2 and 4. Playback for all types could be achieved satisfactory on most cassette decks, but you had to generally have a high end cassette deck with a selector switch to record Type 2 and Type 4 cassettes with the best sounding results. You are really old school, young man!
@ShermanWilson
@ShermanWilson 6 жыл бұрын
I'm an old recording engineer. Metal cassettes were phenomenal. I realize a few eyebrows will rise but... you can get CD or DAT quality (I.e. master quality) from a cassette. It wasn't uncommon to bounce your two track master to SVHS video cassettes. This was great for long term storage. However most consumer video decks require some video source to record audio. A black burst generator, color bar generator, or the composite / S video out from a tuner, DVD, or VCR will suffice . With that said. There is maintenance involved with cassette decks. Primarily cleaning with 99% isopropyl alcohol or head cleaner and occasionally "demagnetizing" your heads. A cassette is basically a mini reel to reel. This was a great video!
@chuheihkg
@chuheihkg 4 жыл бұрын
Yes. however that one is not handy, also with many carings. It looks like tape is for archival purpose more than for consumers.
@elhasaneelhafidy2033
@elhasaneelhafidy2033 4 жыл бұрын
Hi! How do you do head demagnetizing?
@ronvalley1973
@ronvalley1973 4 жыл бұрын
@@elhasaneelhafidy2033 you can buy cassette tapes that demagnetize the head, i stil have one.
@davidclark4469
@davidclark4469 4 жыл бұрын
You can also silence a constantly squeaking tape by spraying just a touch of wd40 on the felt tab and running it both fast foward and rewind. Squeak is gone. This is not for squeaking spindles, it's for old tape squeaking against the heads. Spindles can be treated with a shot of spray silicone.
@davidclark4469
@davidclark4469 4 жыл бұрын
Lighter fluid works on heads too. Then rub the heads with a q-tip containing a little spray silicone. Helps the tape slide by effortlessly.
@patrickeh696
@patrickeh696 7 жыл бұрын
I always crack up when I watch videos of the past made by children who weren't alive then. NO! Nothing I was told about cassettes was a lie.
@jazzman1626
@jazzman1626 7 жыл бұрын
Patrick EH There is little if any interaction involved in digital music. We used to have to get a cassette out of its box, press play and record. Pause at the end of the track to put on a different record and after the tape was made, sometimes we'd take it with us to a friend's ( actual friend, not virtual friend) house to give him/her the mix and enjoy the company of a living, breathing human. Now it's press a button or swipe a screen for a playlist. No need to see a living person. Sometimes the longest way round is the best.
@TheFruitMugger
@TheFruitMugger 7 жыл бұрын
+JAZZ MAN Hey, physical friends aren't obsolete, gramps.
@HgRoller
@HgRoller 7 жыл бұрын
No but you are a watermelon. He's also black so be prepared to get double fisted by him.
@SkaYouth
@SkaYouth 7 жыл бұрын
nahh.. we can still have a human interaction through digital medium. me and my friend still sit in front of computer and share our new finding from the web. sometimes it is an obscure band on youtube or a new releases in bandcamp, spotify. we would sit together and discuss about it without even spending a dime on buying the physical releases (the best part of this shit). it depend on your set of friends really.. for me human interaction is not really that relevant in comparing the digital and tape. sharing and interaction still exist in digital world if you find a way to do it. tape on the other hand is shit.. trying to repeat a song is shitty as fuck. and i have a stash of damaged cassettes in my collection. i had stop buying for quite a while now especially with the new rise of cassettes cultures that cause the price to increase especially with the international releases ( i'm not from america btw -a tape from america and Europe can be as pricey as the vynil version)
@HgRoller
@HgRoller 7 жыл бұрын
Stop typing. You are making my ears bleed.
@SierraBravo347
@SierraBravo347 5 жыл бұрын
Full circle....Old is New again!👍
@Jin-Ro
@Jin-Ro 4 жыл бұрын
Or Audiophiles are running out of ideas to be edgy, so in desperation turn to crappy cassettes. What's next, phonograph cylinders, and how they sound better than CD's
@SierraBravo347
@SierraBravo347 4 жыл бұрын
@@Jin-Ro Lol!! I think you're right! 😆👍🏻
@colclumper
@colclumper 3 жыл бұрын
@@Jin-Ro 8 Track tapes will be the next thing to blow up
@imranazimviolinist
@imranazimviolinist 5 жыл бұрын
I’m 15 and I listen to wax cylinders and shellac records and idk y i am addicted to it
@dagnytaggart5955
@dagnytaggart5955 5 жыл бұрын
That's because you're licking them. Stop.
@imranazimviolinist
@imranazimviolinist 5 жыл бұрын
Dagny Taggart *it tastes good*
@LeonMare49
@LeonMare49 5 жыл бұрын
OK, not joking: I had six 78s but they fell and broke... One was 'Dream of Olwen' And I have a Webster Chicago dictating machine with 'natural voice playback' from 1949. It is a wire recorder and it's about my age ;)
@HaraldSjellose
@HaraldSjellose 5 жыл бұрын
weirdo
@bailey9947
@bailey9947 5 жыл бұрын
Zemzem Dağdelen dude if you hate old tech then why tf are you here?
@tecn0phreak
@tecn0phreak 8 жыл бұрын
i cant say i'm much of a vinyl or cassette phile, i'm not even really sure why i clicked on this video, but I ended up watching the whole video, lol. Your content was thorough, clear, and you have a good voice for a youtube personality. keep it up!
@vinyleyezz
@vinyleyezz 8 жыл бұрын
+tec fx thank you so much!
@michaelhart2373
@michaelhart2373 8 жыл бұрын
heh, I'm not sure why I came either, and I watched it all too.I guess nostalgia.I wasn't into albums much, rode around alot as a teenager in the 80's, so boxes of cassettes were the norm.God bless Columbia tape club, 15 cassettes for 1 penny lol.
@manualLaborer
@manualLaborer 8 жыл бұрын
do you find him handsome too?
@hasekdom
@hasekdom 7 жыл бұрын
do you? Cassettes were never cool, but they were very good to bring along in the car or for the Walkman. The anolog interest I get, but cassettes are not fantastic in 2017.
@manualLaborer
@manualLaborer 7 жыл бұрын
i used to keep my cassettes in a shoebox (i think Vans, with the conveniently folding top).
@JohnSmith-ii8pp
@JohnSmith-ii8pp 8 жыл бұрын
The best thing about cassettes was loading programs onto your 8-bit computer. You could hear the program loading, so you knew it was working, and it took 10 minutes and 15 retries to load a 4k program. We should dump this lame internet thing and go back to acoustic couplers and 300 baud modems. I may even have some old AOL and CompuServe floppies in storage somewhere...
@jimhatch14
@jimhatch14 8 жыл бұрын
I agree. I can hear my data going into my Ohio Scientific c2 4p and my Heathkit Hero1 robots, not to mention my Heathkit 3400 microprocessor trainer add-on to the et-3400 that gave i/o and cassette data storage. Oh, I left out my C-64.
@EgoShredder
@EgoShredder 8 жыл бұрын
Loading time was usually under five minutes on my old Sinclair ZX Spectrum 48K. However the Commodore 64 took a very long time.....even as much as nearly twenty minutes! :-o
@brunoviland4423
@brunoviland4423 7 жыл бұрын
One word: Turbo.
@Synthematix
@Synthematix 7 жыл бұрын
and these tapes still work after 30 years, try getting a cdr to last that long.
@DJDominator75
@DJDominator75 5 жыл бұрын
Not necessarily true. I have cassettes that are 20-30 years old and they are well looked after and have a fantastic quality sound. These are the basics cassettes too. If you look after your cassettes, cassette decks etc, then you will not have a problem.
@walther4747
@walther4747 3 жыл бұрын
As I bumped into my "first" cassette player back in 2015, I fall in love with the hissing Hi-Fi sound immediately. In conclusion, if you have decent gear (e.g. SONY DD series or Walkman Professional series) even rec./playback on mediocre type I tapes can sound great.
@johnnyho8765
@johnnyho8765 7 жыл бұрын
Hipsters....They bemoan everything about the babyboomers yet think they're cool when they glamm on to stuff we were using in the 80s let alone the 90s.
@jacob.g.l1592
@jacob.g.l1592 7 жыл бұрын
Tony South You vs me! Whoooooo! Generational war! Whoooo! Fuck you...
@johnnyho8765
@johnnyho8765 7 жыл бұрын
Ha, hit a nerve. Do you kiss your mommy with that mouth?
@jacob.g.l1592
@jacob.g.l1592 7 жыл бұрын
You have no idea how childish your comment sounds. You know what I did? I replied to your infantile comment with an infantile comment. I really don't understand this generational hate bullshit. Care to explain it to me? You use apps at all? All that new tech coming out? All that important scientific research being done by young students? How about the services we'll be providing you when you're on your last legs? Or is it me against you? If that's the case, I say we round up all the useless old baby boomers and ship them to an Island in the Pacific. You're outdated tech. Time to go.
@wetlettuce4768
@wetlettuce4768 7 жыл бұрын
Just you wait gramps until you're old and the millenials sieze control.... Oh fuck I will be part of that future we must join forces and get rid of the millenial self entitled SJW types before it's too late.
@NeilRoy
@NeilRoy 7 жыл бұрын
If being shipped to an island in the pacific means getting away from all the spoiled brats, I am packing my bags, when do we leave?! Sounds like paradise to me.
@lowket
@lowket 8 жыл бұрын
In my heyday, mid 80's, i had more than 900 of them. I loved tapes!
@vinyleyezz
@vinyleyezz 8 жыл бұрын
They're super cool! :D
@bluespectrumtapes
@bluespectrumtapes 8 жыл бұрын
I have close to 2000
@bluespectrumtapes
@bluespectrumtapes 8 жыл бұрын
Chomp of course, tapes never really died out. most of mine are noise but this recent resurgence is kind of silly imo
@90lancaster
@90lancaster 8 жыл бұрын
I don't know Analogue has some advantages - yes eventually parts and such will disappear and it will be more a historical thing in a another Generation or two. but at least there is no worry about built-in obsolescence like you see with Computers and some other technology. I can still slip a 1980's Rocky Sound Track tape in for a listen but I can't do the same with a 1980's PC game (not without a lot of messing about anyway). Besides they don't take up a whole lot of space I've always preferred to to CD's myself for reasons of portability and the sound is less clinical.
@whyteshadow
@whyteshadow 8 жыл бұрын
I used to get 90 min metal cassette tapes and copy my vinyl albums on them. A lot of walkman players supported metal, so I was able to play them on those for portability. The only part I was missing was a good set of headphones... but then again, a 16 year old kid would have not been caught dead with a huge pair of cans back then.
@grandmasterjo1
@grandmasterjo1 5 жыл бұрын
Cassette recording was an art. I owned a Nakamichi 3 Head cassette deck and my recordings on Maxell tape could never tell the difference between vinyl and the recording. Such was the passion in recording with perfect azimuth alignment and correct biaz. I was lucky to experience this. The Walkman by Sony was a revolution. The 15 inch spool machines showed you as a high end audiophile and unit playing displayed clarity at its best, besides the machine looked impressive, sexy, and romantic. It simply displayed ones personality. One day all this will return as the effects of radiation in smartphones has begun to show.
@MatrixAlphaCWX
@MatrixAlphaCWX 3 жыл бұрын
I make mixtape Cassettes on my Sony ZX6 dual cassette. They are all crystal clear and beautiful. My 2006 mustang plays them perfectly aswell. The ones who play old cassettes yeah they may sound like poo cuz they were played a million times hahaha. Or they are playing them on a new cassette player with 1inch speakers 😂 Tons of record companies released cassettes this year for their bands. Rise Records just released all their bands with cassettes. And Alice n chains and a bunch more just did too. I’ve been seeing it all over Facebook. Cassettes are the new vinyl for 2020 going into 2021. I collect vinyl and cassette’s. 😏
@mayorb3366
@mayorb3366 7 жыл бұрын
A common sight from days of the cassettes and 8 tracks, was miles of tape blowing around pretty much every parking lot everywhere.
@clllaytrrron
@clllaytrrron 6 жыл бұрын
I miss that... You never see the brown glistening streams along the roadside anymore. :(
@madjidhamdini8114
@madjidhamdini8114 6 жыл бұрын
miles ? maybe ten of thousand miles haha ( do you remeber when a tape is cut ,repear it with scotch ? ;)
@mbaer5
@mbaer5 6 жыл бұрын
Wow now thats a trip down memory lane lol I'm a "youngin" only 27 but damn that was a sight of my childhood I completly forgot about
@k.chriscaldwell4141
@k.chriscaldwell4141 6 жыл бұрын
So true. So true. One could almost always identify the prevailing wind direction of a location by where blown tape had accumulated in and around shrubbery and trees.
@oubrioko
@oubrioko 8 жыл бұрын
6:33 "These things are a lot more durable than a CD." Dude, you're reaching.
@jmm1000
@jmm1000 8 жыл бұрын
in day to day/everyday-use handling, cassettes absolutely win for damage resistance
@oubrioko
@oubrioko 8 жыл бұрын
I've scratched one CD severely enough to cause playback to skip in nearly 30 years of "day-to-day" handling of various optical mediums (CD, DVD, Blu-ray). Depending on the CD player used, I can still play that 27 year-old scratched CD without the audio skipping at all. The highest quality tape degrades over time much more quickly than the cheapest CDs will. I have some ~25 year-old chrome and metal audio cassettes that have developed wow and flutter on playback, just as a result of sitting idle for long periods without use. I routinely play CDs in my older car. My oldest CDs sound the same as the day I bought them in the late 80s or early 90s. Play a cassette a few hundred times, you'll start to notice the degradation of the recording. Play a CD 10,000 times, and you cannot tell the difference from the first time you played it. A marginal tape deck can eat your cassette and ruin the tape without warning. I've never heard of CD player ruining a CD . . . ever. Someone who repeatedly scratches optical discs enough to affect playback through day-to-day handling, casts more of a negative perception on the handler than it does on the medium. A friction-based recording medium's longevity is reduced each time that it is used with much more noticeable effect, when compared with optical disc mediums. This is part of the reason why audio cassettes and vinyl were ultimately succeeded by compact discs, and why even hi-end digital video cassette mediums were eclipsed by DVD and Blu-ray discs. Optical discs became cheaper to produce, have no moving parts, have more longevity, and their optical playback devices are unlikely to damage the media.
@jmm1000
@jmm1000 8 жыл бұрын
you said durability, not lifespan. (which, over many years, with foil delamination and "disc rot", isnt much different)
@larskappeler
@larskappeler 8 жыл бұрын
I noticed disc rot on some of cheapest burned CDs which were stored in my car that becomes quite hot in the summer and very cold in the winter and gets wet sometimes. Not the best conditions to store a CD. But I also have cheap burned CDs which are about 15 years old. I don't have any problems with them. And I still own my first original CDs I bought when I was 12, that was 24 years ago. Still plays absolutely flawless without any loss in sound. I can't tell it about ANY of my cassettes.
@oubrioko
@oubrioko 8 жыл бұрын
AN N Sounds like I should have bought more TDKs, and fewer Sonys. Good to know. I'll go listen to some of my TDK type II CrO2s and see if they have degraded to the same degree. Do you have any actual experience writing English, or are you like many KZbinrs who ought to know better, but go around posting fragments that end in prepositions?
@thetinysideoftiny7625
@thetinysideoftiny7625 Ай бұрын
“Choose a cassette deck, not a boombox” You torched the video for me brother. I’m a boombox collector and I’m only here for that reason 😂 Why would I ever listen to or record ANYTHING if it wasn’t on a boombox? 😂 (seriously though, great video and perfect advice)
@andreclarke5611
@andreclarke5611 2 жыл бұрын
As someone who's been buying and listening to music since the mid 70's, I must say that almost no one back in the 70's and pre-CD 80's listened to cassettes on home stereos. Sure, you could make great sounding cassettes for your own use, to play in the car, for instance, and the ones you bought at the store were fine for that purpose and for boom-boxes, but very few people listened to cassettes for true sonic purposes. They were made for portability and convenience, not for sound quality. Also, as far as durability goes, CD's are inherently more durable. Cassettes will eventually wear out, and the cheaper ones like they used for general release music are subject to jamming as well. So as a nostalgic thing, cassettes are fine. But as a way to listen to quality music, not so much. And I say this as someone who used to put every LP I bought onto high quality chrome tape to listen to in the car!
@terryabbott9534
@terryabbott9534 6 жыл бұрын
I have always been happy with the sound of cassette tapes. Turntables are making a comeback, why isn't someone making good quality cassette recorders. Like with three heads, Doby etc. What happened, Sony.
@67DUTCHMAN
@67DUTCHMAN 5 жыл бұрын
Good used cassette decks are still available online. Look for a SINGLE deck, three head deck, just like the man above explained. Two head decks do not last, and have poor sound quality by comparison. You don't really need Dolby if you have a good sound system and/or a graphic equalizer. Dolby actually removes authentic sound quality....getting rid of all the hiss also gets rid of sound quality and realism. Especially from vinyl.
@n.s.3812
@n.s.3812 5 жыл бұрын
The market isn't there, unfortunately. Another issue is tape - only one or two companies are currently producing tape, and they're only able to produce type 1 ferric oxide tape, which isn't particularly good. There will never be cro2 magnetic tape made again because of the manufacturing processes' affect on the environment. Best buy a used deck, and all the NOS type ii and iv tape you can find, before prices get even crazier
@slingshotkurt8474
@slingshotkurt8474 6 жыл бұрын
I was born in 97 but I have an obsession with the 80s and old fashioned styles of many different things. I do wish there were more people like me but at the same time it's nice to have an uncommon hobby.
@tonivoul1971
@tonivoul1971 4 жыл бұрын
Your not the only one
@griffenpeck9578
@griffenpeck9578 Ай бұрын
When I started collecting vinyl, I had a suitcase player and wasn’t satisfied. I planned on giving up on vinyl, but I decided to give KZbin a look on what people say about vinyl. Your video came up and told me everything I needed to know. Immediately I bought an ATLP60X which I still use and am very happy with. Over two years later I own 100 records that I properly sleeve up and take care of thanks to you. When I went to my record store today I looked around longer and saw a fantastic selection in the tape section. I picked one up even though I don’t own a player knowing it was cheap and I wasn’t taking a big risk. This time I decided I wasn’t gonna make the same mistake and looked up “what to know about cassettes” and this video popped up. Feels like a full circle moment, and this time I’m going into it educated! Thank you, very much.
@DanielQwerty
@DanielQwerty 3 жыл бұрын
I have an awesome record store near me that sells tapes for 2 dollars(Singles, EPs and ALBUMS!) and CDs for 3 dollars so I was able to buy 5 albums for 12 dollars(3 tapes, 2 CDs)
@The8BitGuy
@The8BitGuy 8 жыл бұрын
I was not aware the head moved in auto-reverse. I thought they just had two capstan rollers and the tape just changed direction. I'm pretty sure the read head stays exactly where it is.
@yveslapierre2299
@yveslapierre2299 8 жыл бұрын
no, the head does flip, otherwise it would just play back the same two(stereo) tracks in reverse, the flipping aligns the tape head gaps with the two tracks in the corresponding direction,
@yveslapierre2299
@yveslapierre2299 8 жыл бұрын
however, auto reverse portable walkman units did not move the head, they had four tape head gaps and a mechanical switch to select the proper gaps for the side being played. I have wondered why the high end auto reverse decks did not use this method. There must have been a reason, such as inductance of signal between the gaps or something like that.
@The8BitGuy
@The8BitGuy 8 жыл бұрын
That is the system I was familiar with, since I had a walkman.
@sjogosPT
@sjogosPT 8 жыл бұрын
Panasonic "Walkmans" rotate tape heads for exemple. Very nice to know sony have different system.
@bryede
@bryede 8 жыл бұрын
The main reason is that the tape shifts slightly with the direction of travel so the best head alignment (azimuth) in one direction is not the same as it is in the other. You can verify this on an auto reverse deck with a stationary head. Adjust it until the highs are as good as they can be on side 1, then reverse it. The highs will be duller. Adjust it again on side 2 and you'll see the dilemma. So, a flipping head has two adjustable stop-points. The best solution is Nakamichi's tape-flipping method used on decks like the RX-202.
@bkkersey93
@bkkersey93 8 жыл бұрын
I know you also remember how we "downloaded" music in the 90s and early 2000s. Recording off of the radio, cd etc. Good times!
@DaveTexas
@DaveTexas 4 жыл бұрын
You obviously weren’t around when the record industry moved from 8-track to cassette at the end of the ‘70s. Cassettes were TERRIBLE. Prerecorded. cassettes were all high-speed duplicated on the cheapest tape possible. Yes, a metal tape on a high-end system can sound OK, although 1.75ips or whatever that snail’s pace was is still not great. I had a nice cassette deck in 1980, but prerecorded tapes never sounded good. And durability was also NOT a thing. Cassettes degraded over time. Cassettes could get jammed in the player, with tape winding around a roller. That was game over for sound quality - if you could get the tape spooled back correctly. Tapes would stretch. Wow and flutter were a huge problem. Of course, I was used to a 1/4" reel-to-reel system that played back at 7.5ips, so cassettes were never going to compare. Cassettes were most definitely for the non-audiophile back then, just like the MP3 is for the non-audiophile now. I used cassettes for portability and for the car. Not for anything remotely close to serious listening.
@tylerkidd9320
@tylerkidd9320 3 жыл бұрын
I have like 30 tapes and they all sound as good as digital the heck you talking about
@DaveTexas
@DaveTexas 3 жыл бұрын
tyler kidd You must be 12 years old.
@tylerkidd9320
@tylerkidd9320 3 жыл бұрын
15
@gethighonlife11
@gethighonlife11 3 жыл бұрын
Most prerecorded cassettes sounded like sh*t because the record companies used a low grade type 1 tape for these recordings. Once in a blue moon, they might issue a tape recorded on type 2 chrome tapes.
@DuelingForce
@DuelingForce 2 ай бұрын
As a certified audio/studio engineer and a long life audiophile, I will tell you my "perception" of audio cassette. I used cassettes starting in the early mid 1980s, and up until compact disc broke the scene. First is the inches per second, or how fast the tape travels over the head. It is 1 3/4 ips, which is twenty times as slow as a professional "mixdown" reel to reel speed, which btw was the professional standard during the analog advent. 30 ips was high professional quality, 15 ips was professional mid quality. The faster the tape moves across the head, both to record and play, the higher resolution of the audio quality. Many also not know this: after recording on one deck, it may sound good playing back on that same deck. However, some may notice it does not sound good on other decks for playback. Hence, azimuth, the alignment of the head, as it relates to recording and playback. Essentially, stripped down version of this is "the angle of the heads". If the angle is off, it causes phase cancellation, which distorts and shuts down the high frequency spectrum, say, a hi hat or cymbal. All of that range will be attenuated, for thile whole recording, if deck a azimuth is different than deck b c d e f azimuth. It's the most common problem w cassette playback, and most don't have the rear or knowledge to fiddle with a micro screwdriver, this degrading playback quality enormously, not enjoyable! Wow and flutter, tape degradation, demagnetizing the heads etc all are other massive issues w the cassette. Good luck!
@Davidevgen
@Davidevgen 8 жыл бұрын
i use old vhs tape somtimes to record audio only. its sounds nearly perfect to the source audio.
@MrROTD
@MrROTD 8 жыл бұрын
VHS tapes have excellent audio
@michaelt.4806
@michaelt.4806 8 жыл бұрын
This was and sometimes still is the best way of recording sound in a portable way, specially if you rebuild the VCR to just record audio. Don't always assume digital is magic, it is just the cheapest and easiest way of recording and cutting/pasting sound. VHS was only good for sound, Betamax was best for picture.
@ObnosisJones
@ObnosisJones 8 жыл бұрын
Provided that you have a hi-fi VHS machine that recorded the sound with spinning heads on the video drum. This was recorded on two separate FM carriers (left and right) using two extra heads co-located with the video tracks. The standard VHS audio (even with Dolby nr) was crap.
@Davidevgen
@Davidevgen 8 жыл бұрын
Paul Gibbons i have what was once a 2000 dollar professional grade Panasonic AG-7350 super vhs deck that records sound flawlessly. but ive also tried the cheapo stuff that toshiba still puts out and it also sound great. i mainly use that machine to dump peoples vhs to dvd since all the combo units suck these days
@flamencoprof
@flamencoprof 8 жыл бұрын
Although I still treasure my records, cassettes had the wonderful advantage of recordability. I used to capture stuff off VHS recorded TV shows before recycling the VHS. I also used to use the VHS timer facility to record Audio In from radio shows and copy that to cassette. To have the recording at all is sometimes more important than the fidelity. KZbin is full of old video we are just grateful to see, never mind the quality.
@jimmcfarland3446
@jimmcfarland3446 7 жыл бұрын
So.... you just repeat back what Techmoan says..???
@Brato1986
@Brato1986 7 жыл бұрын
I was searching for someone on the comments for that. Yeah he did not add anything new, just stole views.
@miguelsalami
@miguelsalami 4 жыл бұрын
I am just now getting back into cassettes and have unboxed my old 1979 JVC KD-10 deck & & Realistic 4 channel analog mixer & Highball 7 microphone, still have brand new cassette tapes never opened to begin recording on. If you have never done this it's ALOT OF FUN👍👍❗🎵🎶
@nazfrde
@nazfrde 9 ай бұрын
This should have been called "Cassettes: Everything I Mistakenly Believed Was Inaccurate, But Then I Really Didn't Know Anything About Them. You, However, Might Not Be As Ignorant As I Am".
@afj2276
@afj2276 7 жыл бұрын
probably the best things about cassettes is when you make a mix tape is that favourite song is not played to death and goes into rotation unlike using the repeat function on mp3 players. This has the added value of not getting bored of it so quickly and not having loved ones tearing their heads out because you have played it 20 times in succession. \\good luck buying a decent portable player these days though//
@billkeithchannel
@billkeithchannel 6 жыл бұрын
When recording songs off of the radio I have tapes where I accidentally recorded the same song twice in a row. This was mainly because you had 1 or two notes to recognize the song before hitting record real quick and I wanted as much of the entire song as I could get.
@Ringworm1281
@Ringworm1281 7 жыл бұрын
Being born in the late 90's I was growing up when old formats were dying, and honestly I don't remember them being as bad as people say, my sister's cassettes never crackled or anything, games on cartridges looked and sounded fine and my VHS tapes had no lines and the picture was absolutely fine.
@prep74
@prep74 7 жыл бұрын
It's all relative. Cassette tape can sound good but listen to a good recording on a CD then it is not so good. Same with watching a DVD and then watching VHS.
@Ringworm1281
@Ringworm1281 7 жыл бұрын
Uh no. I have clear memory of the year 2000-2004. By 2004 I was eight years old, and if it it took you until you were eight to develop memory and comprehension skills then your mother really should have stopped drinking during pregnancy. Also they were still making VHS tapes circa 2004-2005 most of the stuff I had on VHS was all stuff that was recent in it's time. And old games were far easier to come by back then, not to mention the GBA which still used carts.
@iBullyDemons
@iBullyDemons 7 жыл бұрын
Mantis128 I can confirm this
@markdms321
@markdms321 7 жыл бұрын
I still used my vhs all the time in the early 2000's and as a car stereo installer, Still installed a few new tape decks, So I can confirm it too!
@LEO1WOLF
@LEO1WOLF 7 жыл бұрын
Ro RoAteFiveSeven, or. Ruh-Roh Reorge857 doesn't know what the hell he's talking about. I do agree with the rest of y'all's comments here.
@oz1dwf
@oz1dwf Жыл бұрын
Born in 1963 and grew up with tape recorders and cassette recorders everywhere I went. Today I am the lucky owner of a couple of wonderful Hi-Fi systems. One is based on a Pioneer A757 MkII, which is used on a daily basis when sound from TV, DVD, VHS or the Internet is required. A Pioneer CT757 MkII tape recorder is also purchased. If I sit and listen to the music as the primary thing, I have my Master system, which is controlled by a Pioneer A777. The tape recorder here is nothing less than a Pioneer CT830s. If I want the good sound, I prefer playing a cassette tape with music I have chosen. The source is either LP, CD or best (min. HD) sound from e.g. KZbin, then the Master system is switched on and the most glorious sound flows into the room and my ears. My preferred media have always been vinyl and cassette. A few decades ago, I gave up on the reel-to-reel tape recorder, which was partly difficult to operate (compared to cassette tapes) and partly expensive to operate. The later cassette tape recorders, such as The B&O BeoCord 9000 could almost achieve the same sound quality and was much cheaper to run and easier to operate. Enjoy cassette tapes daily, they are as good as I remember and still experience their sound quality. As a bonus, they are solid, durable and difficult to break. If you buy a cassette tape recorder online, you should change the belts. It will make your experience better. Not many tape recorders can last 40 years without new belts. These are wear parts, like tires on a car. If you can overcome this, an experience of a sublime nature awaits you. -Go for it! Highly recommendable.
@otep1fan
@otep1fan 2 жыл бұрын
Cassettes have made a massive comeback in the heavy metal world.
@richardcrook2112
@richardcrook2112 Жыл бұрын
Good to hear it, the heavy metal cassette was a staple of the late 80s early 90s.
@bilbobaggins9488
@bilbobaggins9488 6 жыл бұрын
I hear a song on the radio in my car, it sounds pretty weak. I play that same tape in my car, it's on a rare level you almost never get to hear.
@frankscarano4708
@frankscarano4708 7 жыл бұрын
Great video and a good way to encourage the use of a wonderful format. The only comments I can make to vinyl Eeezz is that the date range to look for the best cassette deck is NOT the 90's in fact there were very few well made decks in the 90's truth is that cassette really declined by the late 80's with the rise of CD affordability. There were a few good 90's decks here and there but the best made decks were made from the late 70's to the mid to late 80's.being that the cassette format was the strongest during this period. The best MFG for cassette decks hands down was Nakamichi. I can tell you through experience in order to make a cassette sound great you need a number of factors that Nakamichi got down pat... You need proper head alignment and tape torque, proper level matching to the tape being used and proper bias. All addressed by Nakamichi. When properly set up even using Dolby you can get a nearly perfect match from source to tape even with type 1 "normal" bias tape with true 20-20Khz response. I own a Nakamichi ZX-7 and a Dragon and They are as good as it gets. There were plenty of others made too and the key is having a bias adjustment and built in test tones. You will get amazing results with a properly tuned deck much the same way you would get amazing results with a properly tuned turntable. Thing though with going after tape decks from the late 70's to mid 80's is that many of them will need maintenance unless they have had them done recently. More likely the 90's decks will have a greater chance of working out of the box. Also make note that Dolby "s" was a rare feature only found in a few decks, Sony was one of them. That Sony ES deck you shown was one of Sonys better 90s deck so a good choice.. Dolby B,C was the most common and some decks even had DBX and HX pro.
@monkeywkeys3916
@monkeywkeys3916 7 жыл бұрын
I remember Nak in the 80s-90s. Great Gear, well built, looked awesum! On a side note I recall a Tape Deck that physically extended the port outward and turned the cassette around... for continuous play. Coolest thing i ever seen in 1982 @ a Sound World store.
@quantumleap359
@quantumleap359 7 жыл бұрын
+Grant Agreed. But the NAK stuff was too pricy for my blood back then. Hitachi and Technics made some awesome three head decks back in the early 80's. Several were marketed under the Radio Shack brand. I still own an SCT-30 three head Radio Shack deck. Made by Hitachi, it has dual capstans, front panel bias adjustments and Dolby B. Not the latest and greatest, but it will still make tapes that will knock your socks off. Amazing performance considering the track widths and the incredibly slow tape speed. A technical marvel, only surpassed, IMHO, by the mass-produced helical scan video tape machines!
@monkeywkeys3916
@monkeywkeys3916 7 жыл бұрын
YEah & Yeah. That NAK price was steep. and one of my buddys whos parents owned a music store.... he liked TEC or I think it was Fisher.
@Bobby-fj8mk
@Bobby-fj8mk 7 жыл бұрын
I've got a TEAC A450 but it needs servicing. I think I'll have to replace the main rubber belt. The problem will be getting one. The sound was almost indistinguishable from CD & in someways it was better - less harsh on the ear.
@the1texasmccoy
@the1texasmccoy 7 жыл бұрын
I was thinking similar thoughts (though not in as much awesome detail!). I was in high school from 90-94, cassettes were still around and plentiful, but were definitely starting to take a back seat to CD's by then. The 1980's was the height of the cassette tape era. My dad had an awesome stereo setup, including turntable and cassette players (sorry I forget which brand) and taught me how to take care of both formats. My very first now 30 year old cassette tapes still play well to this day :)
@mike196212
@mike196212 5 жыл бұрын
Still have tons of cassettes and started regularly recording lps onto them starting in the early 80s. Used to be a lot of fun and most of them still sound good. Maxell and TDK were especially good.
@LawrenceWillPage
@LawrenceWillPage 5 жыл бұрын
I am 52. I was an avid vinyl and tape user back in the 80s and 90s. I bought the best metal tapes: not just metal, but I recorded my favorite albums on metal tapes with aluminum casings and smooth-moving mechanisms that made the tape performance even better. I had a Nakamichi tape deck. I taped my vinyl albums and then stored the vinyl, which I still have: about 20 linear feet of record albums. I made tapes that were much better quality than the store-bought pre-recorded tapes, and ridiculed people who bought pre-recorded tapes for that very reason. So the initial hypothesis is ok that cassette tapes were not as bad as we think. But they were not at all as good as this guy claims, and they don't stand up to modern audio quality like vinyl does. They were a necessary compromise and the best we had available at the time for mobile fidelity. -Even metal tapes degrade fairly quickly and easily compared to vinyl or digital. The CDs from the 80s and 90s will outlive the cassettes from that time. The hard drives of today will outlive them all. -They are subject to magnetic distortions and even outright erasings if they got too close to any magnets. -The actual magnetic tape is flimsy and would often break or flip over so the backside was exposed to the tape heads. I can't count the number of times I needed to unscrew the casings, delicately retrieve the broken tape, gently thread it back through the mechanism, then carefully splice and screw the casing closed. -The magnetic tape would also get stuck inside the tape decks by unraveling onto the rubber roller instead of the other cassette reel. -They did not take temperature fluctuations well, which degraded the sound quality even more. -They melted inside cars. -To skip a song, you needed to fast forward and wait... and wait... and wait. I had a few auto-indexing tape decks that would fast forward to the next silence (in between tracks), but that went even slower than regular fast forwarding, and you still needed to wait... and wait... and wait. If the song you wanted was on the other end of the tape, you had to wait a couple minutes to fast forward through the tape. -If you wanted to listen to an album again, you needed to rewind. -They had high end "tape hiss" that called for various Dolby technology that really ended up just cutting off the high end off the music. (On my Nakamichi, I ended up not using Dolby on my metal tapes because of the high-end cutoff). -And, after a while, even if you avoided all those pitfalls, the tape simply wore out from use. So the tapes that are still around sound far worse today than when they were recorded 20-30 years ago. I have tried re-mastering and recording my cassette tape collection into digital files, and the source sound from most of my metal cassette tapes is now awful. And it is almost all available on Spotify, now, in better sound quality. So it is not worth the effort. Digital audio is so much better than cassette tapes for both mobile and stereofile listening. It is more portable, easier to index, pushes more sound, and captures a range of subtleties that is lost in cassette tape hiss. Digital does have compression issues, but the recorded sound quality of digital is MUCH better than even the best metal cassettes. Yes, vinyl is still king... at home... with a top-notch turntable and system. But I would take a digitized high-bitrate VBR MP3 recording of a vinyl record or a CD over a cassette tape any day of the week.
@grlg2
@grlg2 6 жыл бұрын
Also another very important feature to look for is Dolby HX-Pro Dynamic bias system (This is not a noise reduction system but a Headroom eXtension system that work only during the recording phase). This in my opinion vastly improved high frequency response.
@robmccarthy1018
@robmccarthy1018 6 жыл бұрын
I agree. My last Technics deck ( 3 head ) had HX Pro and it really opened up the dynamic range.
@atlekristiansen4975
@atlekristiansen4975 7 жыл бұрын
What? EVERYTHING is a lie. I never used them to play music or play games on the Commodore 64? My whole life is a complete lie!
@donalso
@donalso 7 жыл бұрын
I would be surprised if you could even write a short story on a Commodore 64. I think they did use one to get to the moon though.
@franceslarina5508
@franceslarina5508 7 жыл бұрын
The C-64 wasn't that bad. You aught to try writing anything on a TRS-80 and saving it to tape...now, it you'll excuse me I need to go yell at the kids running across my lawn.
@donalso
@donalso 7 жыл бұрын
My first computer was a little Timex thingie. Not even a Commodore 64.I managed to program it to run a young friend through the times tables.|His reward was $10 upon completion. About the same price I paid for the device.
@dominiclapinta8537
@dominiclapinta8537 11 күн бұрын
I was born in 85 and I have always loved cassette. Even the "worse kind* of cassette tapes, if you have a good cassette player/recorder, can sound really good. Especially cassette recorders if you are recording yourself playing an instrument or singing. I play an Irish bagpipe and I have recorded onto cassette and have just plugged it into my computer and recorded what was off of the tape directly and the quality sounds great. It even sounded better than having recorded digitally in the past. Those old Magnavox and sony cassette/cd/radio boom boxes that were made in Japanese in thr 90's were really good. I still have one and I have recorded from CD's onto cassette and the quality is precise. I love both old and new tech and combining them
@byteseq
@byteseq 3 жыл бұрын
Recordings on tape is not about sound quality, it's about memories.
@Grumpy_old_Boot
@Grumpy_old_Boot 7 жыл бұрын
I lived through the 80's and 90's, and trust me, you aint missing out on anything nowadays.
@Mooncalf2012
@Mooncalf2012 8 жыл бұрын
Tapes got a bad rep, because duplicating standards were often poor, and most decks had improperly adjusted "azimuth" alignment on the playback head (even straight from the factory). Also, poorly made shells, caused more "wow and flutter", and the ferric oxide build up from the cheap quality store bought tapes would cause even more degradation in sound quality, not to mention residual magnetic fields on the play head that would actually cause pre-recorded tapes to be slowly "erased" over time. Cassette decks need periodic cleaning, maintenance and degaussing, to play back at consistent fidelity (and to prevent tapes being "eaten", pinch rollers and capstan, must be cleaned too). It only takes a few minutes to adjust azimuth, (or head alignment) on most tape decks with a mini (non magnetic) phillips screw driver, (even on the Walkman type). Another factor is that most decks do not have a proper speed adjustment (some modern ones are fixed, and often off-speed) Sony "Sport" Walkman had an easily accessed speed adjustment port, with a rubber seal, BTW . Add even more dirt and grime and problems to the typical car cassette, and you can see why people ditched them for CD a long time ago, but on a properly maintained deck, (or even a good quality Sony Walkman) a good cassette can far surpass CD quality (albeit with more 'hiss'), and come close to the quality of an LP recording.
@423FGFDFHFHV
@423FGFDFHFHV 8 жыл бұрын
In the specs for my Tascam DA-20 it says wow and flutter undetectable!
@pilotpete2
@pilotpete2 7 жыл бұрын
True, BUT, the DA 20 is not a cassette recorder, it be a DAT digital recorder, and dat makes a world of difference.;-)
@423FGFDFHFHV
@423FGFDFHFHV 7 жыл бұрын
You got DAT right! The DA-20 can record directly from CD at 44.1 K and the copy protection can be turned off. Are you aware of DCC as in Digital Compact Cassette?
@pilotpete2
@pilotpete2 7 жыл бұрын
Oh yeah!!!!;-) One of the biggest bombs in audio history!! Along with the El-cassette many moons ago. Analog is dead, even the growth in vinyl is being mostly sourced from digital sources. Any recording system is bound by the law of GIGO, and Hi-rez digital is virtually transparent in how well it reproduces what yuo feed it , again, garbage in, garbage out. I was born in the 78 RPM era, and I hated vinyl when digital was far off for consumer audio.
@423FGFDFHFHV
@423FGFDFHFHV 7 жыл бұрын
Did you hate shellac as much as vynal?
@josearqco
@josearqco 3 жыл бұрын
Cassettes, vinyl and digital audio as well, I want everything!!
@ronnywilson2112
@ronnywilson2112 3 жыл бұрын
I first started in music with cassettes in the early to mid 90's, but I get bored and annoyed of the tape degradation every time you played them, and flipping sides every time like LP's, yes guys that's the secret behind. Just like VHS tapes. I keep around 50 tapes from different pressings and colors, especially the chromed ones with DigAlog technology. I turned completely to CD's in 1994-5 and still love them even more than vinyl.
@davidschmidt7446
@davidschmidt7446 7 жыл бұрын
Over time cassettes all go to hell you just dont know it yet...
@appealingpit
@appealingpit 7 жыл бұрын
Yup and is when you make a copy of that cassette. When it is new and wear out the slave copy. My dad taught me that.
@arikiviaho9863
@arikiviaho9863 7 жыл бұрын
Beautifull.Look out 2018 when Gordon brings out TB 4. Peace and Love.
@calebmatthews2026
@calebmatthews2026 7 жыл бұрын
Harold Lewis hahaha OMG I remember doing this! All my originals were in a fancy case and only got opened when time to make a fresh copy
@Jvavolerpareil
@Jvavolerpareil 6 жыл бұрын
Hey man! I completely agree with you about sound quality. I used to repair and maintain hundreds of cassette deck in the past years. I still have my Nakamichi BX150 that sound just great and is not for sell! Not like vinyl or CD but quite close and much better that average people thing. You just forgot a VERY important thing: KEEP THE HEADS CLEAN ! A dirty head will gradually erase the recording. Use a cotton swab imbibed with alcohol or acetone (be careful with acetone, do not let it come in contact with plastic). Clean the head and all the tape path at least every 25 hours of playing time. If you do it, your cassettes will last for lllllllong!
@robbedoeslegrand236
@robbedoeslegrand236 5 жыл бұрын
And keep the heads demagnetized!
@wayofthinkin
@wayofthinkin 5 жыл бұрын
Thumbs up regarding the Nakamichi. Love mine from the early nineties. Still in mint condition and performs perfectly ! And in addition to cleaning the heads, periodically demagnetizing is a good idea as well. Cheers !
@theredplanet2292
@theredplanet2292 4 жыл бұрын
Christian Forget Oh my god, the second paragraphs take me back to the 70’s when I used to clean heads with meth spirit and cotton buds. A question for you, being very impressed with your knowledge on matters related to cassettes. I have also been ‘de-magnetising’ player heads regularly, with a plug in device for 3 decades now, and the players have served me well. Would you recommend this? I would really like your input.
@RaleighRonsClassics
@RaleighRonsClassics 2 жыл бұрын
I have been rebuilding my childhood cassette collection recently. I had the idea they sucked but liked the nostalgia of my childhood. Then i picked up an old Sony F18 Walkman and hooked up some good ear buds. Blown away how good it sounds. Anything from early Metallica, Slayer and even some Motley Crue. Now I'm sold on them again. I just hate rewinding/forwarding. Records and CDs killed it on that 1 point.
@cyberjism
@cyberjism 5 жыл бұрын
nothing causes a panic attack quicker than the cassette player eating the tape while your favorite song is playing...i remember pulling out a few feet of wrinkled tape and cutting it out with a pair of scissors. lost a good portion of a song, but was able to splice the two pieces back together with some scotch tape.
@Kevo216666
@Kevo216666 8 жыл бұрын
Cassettes are not 'durable'... I spent my youth unravelling reams of cassette tape from one player or another... They are universally self-destructive..... But I still love them.
@TerryClarkAccordioncrazy
@TerryClarkAccordioncrazy 8 жыл бұрын
Yeh, they were a right faff, I had to rewind many of them using a pen and deal with them getting all chewed up inside the player. Sure, it didn't happen with the top class decks but kids didn't have that stuff in the 80s, we had crappy walkmans and car players that chewed them up. And then the cases cracked and the loose tapes rattled about in the car and all the tape got loose and came out. I even had one that had somehow flipped part of the tape upside down and it played backwards. Sitting on the train with a walkman you'd have to debate whether to fast forward through the tape to find a song because it might make the batteries run out. Sometimes you'd see great long strings of tape by the side of the road or wrapped around bushes, perhaps where somebody had chucked the thing out of the car window in disgust and it'd smashed and been blown about. Ah, those were the days.
@GaryGrabowski
@GaryGrabowski 8 жыл бұрын
The tape itself also degrades with repeated plays and with environmental factors - heat, humidity and direct sunlight. Over time, the plastic tape itself will degrade and the metallic coating can flake from the tape. Cassettes did always sound great at first.... If anybody knows if those metal tapes he mentioned solve that, it would be worth mentioning.
@toxicwaltz69
@toxicwaltz69 8 жыл бұрын
+Terry Clark The tape played backward...that's hilarious! I miss those days, but like many on here, I don't miss the sound quality and hassle of cassettes. I remember when chrome and metal tape came out, and it was slightly better. But I still vividly remember the first time I got an in-dash CD player for my car...sometime around '90 or '91, I believe. I was absolutely blown away by the improvement in sound quality.
@TerryClarkAccordioncrazy
@TerryClarkAccordioncrazy 8 жыл бұрын
toxicwaltz69 Yes, the sound quality of CD is noticeably better than cassette and it's much more convenient to be able to skip to any track. And lossless compression for portable audio players now means we can have the best of all worlds. But I can see why tapes are fun for kids who've never experienced this the first time round. The faff is part of the appeal, the same reason I still like playing LPs.
@Tedybear315
@Tedybear315 8 жыл бұрын
Don't forget about the issues CD companies had at first! Major teething issues. They got taken off guard when people started complaining about "CD-ROT". Lost a lot of really great 80's and early 90's CD's to that.
@badvoodoodaddy1
@badvoodoodaddy1 6 жыл бұрын
After reading through a few of the comments one thing becomes obvious. The younger generations are so used to immediate satisfaction that they have no patience. I came up in the generation when 8 track was brand new. Cassette tapes and some of the older media types are not totally about the music, it was also about the process. Cassettes we are huge jump up from the 8 track tape. If you used the right equipment and took care of your tapes they sounded incredible. I have recorded 100's of mix tapes and complete album tapes over the years and always used good quality tapes and good equipment. You youngsters need to slow down and enjoy the process as much as the music
@ErectedGasCan
@ErectedGasCan 6 жыл бұрын
There is a lot of truth in that. I still have hope for the kids, the other friday my godsons brother came to visit. I showed him radio casettes, vinyls and a floppy disc when we really were looking for a Playstatio game. He was astonished. I showed him the Microsoft Aquarius from 1982. He was blown away. I showed him the Commodore 64 with attachements. Mindblown again. I showed the Canon X-07 portable computer from 1984. He started to get the picture, smart kid. He understood that it was like now, just "like it was then because it was like that back then". He did not believe me when he tested my Casio SL-80 Solar Powered-Touch Buttoned pocket calculator and i said it was from 1983. The funniest thing was thel headphones, old school black-plastic-bigger-than-fighter-pilots-used from 1972. His mom was born in 1976.. I told him how they work and that i use them with my smartphone. He looked shocked: "WHAT?! Can you use those seventies in a smartphone from twenty sixteen?!?!" :D Then i talked him into testing a Sega Megadrive, and he was amused by that even if the game was old, and it looked old "it's not bad at all". I think he still wonders what a floppy disc is, he had never seen one before... The kid is 10, a good kid. :) Should by him a vinyl-player for his birthday.
@-dreameasy-4449
@-dreameasy-4449 6 жыл бұрын
I am fifteen and my mom got me really interested in cassettes at a really young age. I really like the style and the process of making a mixtape its not only fun and interesting but incredibly gratifying when you get to listen to your favorite music like queen or Jim crose!
@chrisc1553
@chrisc1553 6 жыл бұрын
i am 14 and cant agree more so many people my age a really lazy i have a reel to reel and have used cassettes before really great audio formats
@wassamattau5787
@wassamattau5787 6 жыл бұрын
Even if what you're saying is based in a great truth, when you start saying things like "you youngsters need to learn to enjoy the process as much as..." Eh, on second thought, nevermind this comment. Carry on...
@meman24
@meman24 6 жыл бұрын
As I am sitting here hand folding Jcards for my next release, this is exactly the advice I need.
@sinanb3692
@sinanb3692 Жыл бұрын
Old cassette decks from the late 70s usually have the most reliable mechanisms. After the repair, they usually work for many years. I have a Kenwood KX-1003 three-head deck with ferrite heads. It's sounds absolutely incredible. I restored it completely with a new belt, new Dolby chips and foil-capacitors as both of these tend to fail on this model. After all this work, you have a very reliable cassette deck made out of metal
@JEEPSTR78
@JEEPSTR78 5 жыл бұрын
Technics makes an awesome cassette deck. I still have mine that I purchased in 1995. Also always look for a record volume control so that you may control the volume of your mix tape recordings as well. Cassettes were/are always the easiest way to record music, especially for me as a vinyl DJ.
@etyrnal
@etyrnal 7 жыл бұрын
Don't forget... in the studio... that amazing vinyl record... was recorded on TAPE. Like a 24 track... So, if "TAPE SUX and is INFERIOR!!", then guess what... that vinyl... is a RECORDING made from >>>TAPE
@RPSchonherr
@RPSchonherr 7 жыл бұрын
Tapes are great for making original recordings to be transferred to a metal press. They don't get repeated use. They are not is a cassette but reel. Once complete studios usually put them in a can and in a climate controlled storage vault. Studios rarely use tape decks any more for recording. They can get many more tracks digitally.
@etyrnal
@etyrnal 7 жыл бұрын
Robert Schuster... weird... I thought we were talking about the past.
@RPSchonherr
@RPSchonherr 7 жыл бұрын
We were. In the past that's how it worked with up to so many tracks ( I think 16 or less for tape) but tape gave way to digital for a number of reasons, one being the track limit not just the sound quality. There are a few companies that make vinyl records still. The press is made out of metal and the biscuit is pressed onto it. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Record_press In the past the they made the press from the master tape but I'm not sure if they still do it that way or make it from a master digital recording. The couple of studios I've seen were all digital and only made cd's.
@etyrnal
@etyrnal 7 жыл бұрын
You are literally not telling me anything i do not know. My point was this. The "vinyl purists" who feel that vinyl sound reproduction is superior to tape, don't seem to think about that fact that that vinyl was produced from a magnetic tape MASTER -- DURING the era we're talking about (compact cassette). And back then, DAWs were NOT 32bit float 192HKz, or 5MHz 1bit. Back then the first digital recorders were nowhere near that quality. When vinyl was in it's highest prevalence, it was typically created from TAPE sources. So, if the vinyl of the day was superior, it lost it's superiority by having been sourced from an inferior medium. Somewhat like playing a million dollar recording through $10 speakers. If the music comes through an inferior medium, any the quality before it, or after it in the audio chain is thrown away.
@RPSchonherr
@RPSchonherr 7 жыл бұрын
OK I guess I didn't get what you were saying before. Right, the press for the vinyl record was made from a tape except for some of the earliest recordings which were scored right into the acetate and sounded like crap.
@greg55666
@greg55666 8 жыл бұрын
By the way, metal was all I ever bought. I'm not 100% sure about this, but I think what degraded tape sound was stretching. The metal tapes were better because they didn't stretch.
@Corson
@Corson 8 жыл бұрын
Although metal tapes were the BEST to record on, they were also the most abrasive on the tape deck heads. I had worn a noticeable depression in the head by using metal tapes. I also purchased 2 or 3 replacement heads for the deck just for that reason.
@SPAZZOID100
@SPAZZOID100 8 жыл бұрын
+Corson Wyman i got dropouts
@Clownsec
@Clownsec 8 жыл бұрын
yes it is stretching and also it holds the patterns magnetized into the tape better, basically its a better conductor of magnetism without spreading. However they still had these same issues any tape had, just much less.
@Corson
@Corson 8 жыл бұрын
***** very true that the tape material can wear out but if you have 50 tapes each played about 10 times, that's 500 plays on the one head. That's why I say the head wears out more than the tapes do.
@Clownsec
@Clownsec 8 жыл бұрын
Corson Wyman - I never had a head wear out, it may get a little worse but then a headcleaner would take care of it. Im sure it can easily happen, but would take lots more than hundreds of tape plays from my experience.
@TWEAKER01
@TWEAKER01 5 жыл бұрын
Clarifying a few vital points: • The best cassette playback is via the same machine used to record that cassette tape. Otherwise, adjusting the head azimuth screw is necessary for accurate tracking of the tape (perpendicular across the playback head). • Three heads are better than two, although only beneficial for the user to monitor off-tape during recording. • Dolby Noise Reduction is useful (necessary) for playing tapes *recorded via that same type* of NR only. A user may subjectively prefer the sound of playback without Dolby NR, although it's inaccurate to the recording, over-bright, and... noisier. • The switches on a decent cassette deck: Bias applies to recording only. EQ is for playback only. • Oh, and just as with vinyl (including many classic releases of yesteryear) a lot, if not most, cassette duplication is from digital sources.
@TWEAKER01
@TWEAKER01 5 жыл бұрын
and yes avoid magnetic fields - including placing tapes anywhere near non-shielded speakers.
@lesliekelley5969
@lesliekelley5969 5 жыл бұрын
They brought back the record and cassette so now they need to bring back 8 tracks.
@Mtaalas
@Mtaalas 8 жыл бұрын
I just don't understand... I have FLAC compression and CD's... why choose anything else? I'm musician and audio engineer... there's just no technical point to vinyl or cassette. I'm also a electronic design engineer by trade so trust me, I know my stuff regarding the technology. Is imperfect audio reproduction so much better? Or are you people just gotten fed up with loudness war and you escape to vinyl since loudness war doesn't work with vinyl and they need to be mastered better?
@bretzel30000
@bretzel30000 8 жыл бұрын
i think it might be the thing about the loudness war. i personaly also like the imperfections for example the little needle noises from the vinyl player. also compare the artists: compare fredie mercury with lady gaga or katy perry, there is simply no effort put into music nowdays!
@Rage1732
@Rage1732 8 жыл бұрын
Why do people collect or own older cars rather than by the newest model which are safer and very much more technically advanced. There are many reasons people why people do things. Nostalgia for one. Does the average listener actually care about the technical data concerning fidelity. You'd have to hit the bottom range of the fidelity spectrum for a listener to really care. You said it yourself that you are an expert in the field. Most audio fans are not. There is a certain quality; a "warmth", if you will; that digital media cannot duplicate. I think analog audio will always have a place in music and with fans.
@bryede
@bryede 8 жыл бұрын
The loudness war _does_ work on vinyl. You can cut a dynamically compressed track as easily as an uncompressed one. In both cases you just have to observe reasonable cutting levels.
@arpadzakar7442
@arpadzakar7442 8 жыл бұрын
Shhh... Stop making sense, people don't like it.
@justinholmes5614
@justinholmes5614 8 жыл бұрын
+Arpad Zakar It is mainly the loudness war. A lot of the albums in my iTunes library are recorded from vinyl as well as rips from cd. Comparing Amy Winehouse track for track, the mastering is much louder on the CD and gets a little fatiguing after a couple of tracks I find myself easing the volume down. The same album recorded from vinyl, I can keep turning up the volume up and it stays smooth.
@trekguy31
@trekguy31 8 жыл бұрын
I grew up in the 80's and 90's and still remember using audio tapes and VHS cassettes all the time to watch movies, listen to music, and of course record off the radio. Yeah it wasnt high fidelity or anything but it didnt matter. Either you went to the record store (yes I said store) and bought an album or single or you waited for it to come on the radio at some point. Back then we appreciated stuff like that so much more than kids do today. Is it handy to have all my music on my phone? Yeah and I really do appreciate it. However, some things are worth waiting for and in this information age everyone wants everything now and the meaning of it all gets lost.
@christopheranderson443
@christopheranderson443 8 жыл бұрын
Agreed... those were thw days... I still have over 300 tapes. .some prerecorded. ..some mixes..they still sound good from 30+ years ago.
@EgoShredder
@EgoShredder 8 жыл бұрын
When I grew up in the 70s and 80s, going into town or a nearby city to buy an album you had been waiting months or even years for was truly exciting, and sometimes dare I say it.....an almost spiritual experience you would never forget. Also on a lighter note I remember flicking through hundreds of LPs, while someone else nearby was doing the same and I would purposely take longer in flicking to the next, so that person could see a particular album I thought was amazing. Naturally you would sometimes have a nosey at what they were looking at, and sometimes engage in conversation and swap ideas and thoughts on albums etc. At some record stores the owner would tell you about certain people who had been in, and when they were coming in next. So I would make sure I was there when those people next visited, so I could chat with them and get ideas for albums. It was all one big community back then and although there are online communities now, it simply does not feel and is not the same.
@423FGFDFHFHV
@423FGFDFHFHV 8 жыл бұрын
My VHS machine had HI-FI stereo where the sound was recorded by the video heads. BTW I still have a Betamovie which uses standard Beta cassettes but has only one video head.
@tedlogan5628
@tedlogan5628 4 жыл бұрын
While living in Japan for a couple years, I went to used thrift stores there. In the electronics section they have sooooo many Sony products in pristine condition all wrapped in plastic for pretty good prices. You could tell the majority of Japanese people took great care of their purchases and now the systems sit there awaiting new owners.
@jayonevarra4887
@jayonevarra4887 Ай бұрын
Man,I could've told you, cassettes, sound cool,I never had any issue with them.I'm an ole vintage guy😂
@jennymk01
@jennymk01 6 жыл бұрын
I bought a cassette player too, because I didn’t even know Vinyl was a big thing until after I had a ton. I wanted to explore all kinds of music, and feel closer to me.
@iheartlreoy8134
@iheartlreoy8134 8 жыл бұрын
KZbin, I've watched it now. Please leave me alone.
@tsc9191
@tsc9191 8 жыл бұрын
I feel your pain. I have KZbin Red. I love it. The suggestions are persistent though.
@kniferideaudio
@kniferideaudio Жыл бұрын
I had a Sony We635 Dual well with auto reverse for about 25 years before it's power supply finally took it down. Never had any issues with the auto reverse or any noticeable lack of quality because if it being dual well. It was one of the last great dual well decks Sony released at the turn of the century. Used it to hand out rough mixes to clients at the end of the night so they could listen to in their cars on the way home. Almost everyone still had a cassette deck in their cars in the early 2000's. once burning CD's got to be cheaper and easier, it got a lot less use and it was sad to see it go. It always sounded great to me if it was properly calibrated and you were careful with the levels while recording. The argument could absolutely be made that a professionally made cassette played back on a quality machine is as good as vinyl. If they would have just ran at twice the speed, I would wager they would have had Better Frequency range, lower noise, higher dynamic range than vinyl, but the physical construction just isn't reliable enough to do that. Shame Reel to Reel didn't become more popular for consumer listening as it is the king on all fronts.
@miljannikolic8323
@miljannikolic8323 15 күн бұрын
The tapes were the perfect medium for the time in which they appeared. The way of listening to music through them gave space for the music and the author to be experienced differently, to bring more of one's own personality into listening, and thus to romanticize the music we listen to. Tapes are an obsolete medium today and people who try to dig them into the sun will not be able to relive what they were in the period of their full glory. Today we perceive time differently and this makes it impossible for us to enjoy cassettes as we used to.
@patrickgaspar5601
@patrickgaspar5601 7 жыл бұрын
I hate to throw a curve ball at you, but the minidisc was the ultimate cassette tape. I know it is not a tape but it was an even smaller recordable format that could be erased and recorded on one million times before degredation. Each track can be edited and labeled. It offers instantaneous track access and track identification. Check it out.
@damianhaber4890
@damianhaber4890 7 жыл бұрын
Patrick Gaspar I had a Sony Minidisc recorder in the early 90s, and it was light years away from cassette technology. Being able to move a song from track one to ten without re - rerecording was true freedom. The quality was on par with CD and blanks were 74 and 80 minutes in length.
@e3-po405
@e3-po405 7 жыл бұрын
You just made me remember that once upon a time there was, indeed, a recording and playback medium that sounded worse than cassettes... The mp3 of the early nineties! They were practical, though (I agree on the goodies you mention in your comment); but not high fidelity for sure...
@johnboyle3297
@johnboyle3297 7 жыл бұрын
Patrick Gaspar I still have my Sony mini disc and a hifi that plays them also portable recorder it's a fantastic digital format, I have early CD recorder that still works fine but MD suits my needs fine
@andreatomassini202
@andreatomassini202 7 жыл бұрын
+Patrick Gaspar minidisc is digital audio tho.... and it never was so popular.
@imthegrk
@imthegrk 7 жыл бұрын
mini disc was awesome. Wasn't it really expensive?
@urhur
@urhur 7 жыл бұрын
your english is so clear that I can understand everything that you say. I'm from Brazil! Nice tips about cassets!
@piedrabrillante
@piedrabrillante 7 жыл бұрын
luck kelu Hey, this is not a "practice your listening" channel . Just kidding. I thought the same way while watching this video because my first language is Spanish. By the way, he made me feel nostalgic about those old cassettes and how little children loved to unroll them.
@urhur
@urhur 7 жыл бұрын
I like retro things too, and I remember when I was very young I play musics in cassetts!
@madjidhamdini8114
@madjidhamdini8114 6 жыл бұрын
oh yeah ! my childhood"s music is cassettes/tape/vinyl i remember running on the streets with my yellow waterproof sony cassettes ......today we have the MP3 (maybe mp5 tomorrow haha)
@ErectedGasCan
@ErectedGasCan 6 жыл бұрын
Hey i own a Brazilian casette tape, bought it at a fleemarket and it is some heavy metal music played into a cheap recorder. I think it is from the "tapetrading years" long before my active years. :P
@es8559
@es8559 6 жыл бұрын
luck kelu my Brazilian blows.
@chrisblue1515
@chrisblue1515 22 күн бұрын
Tape is cool. Don't put the tape in your shirt pocket, store it in the case. Keep the cassette away from your phone, laptop, TV monitors (magnets in general) information will fade from the recording. As your tape passes over the playback head while you listen, your heads will become magnetized themselves. At some point, your tape player will begin erasing the recording starting with the treble. If you buy a used cassette with no high end this is why. That muffled sound means it's too late. You must buy a degauss tool and learn to use it or the deck will begin erasing the media as you play it back. Also, you must regularly clean the heads as oxidation and flecks of iron from the tape surface will collect on the heads with time. In time (a long time) the ferric oxide will wear off of the tape's base. If you keep up with the maintenance you tapes will last for years.
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