M
Masterofnone
New member
After reading this thread I've began to question what my dad has always told me about 60s recordings, but I think it holds true after all...makes sense at least.
He's played guitar since probably 1966, been an electronics/TV tech since 1965 was involved with studio-quality tape recorders/machines in the early 70s. He even assembled tape machines for a while, and had to do noise and wow/flutter checks on them, and you wouldn't believe some of the things they did at the factory (like using the competition's motors).
Anyway, rambling aside, he's always said that the bass-less, mid-high focused sound was a result of the music being optimized for the poor home stereos and AM radio of the day...true? A good example I can think of would probably be The Beatles' She Loves Me
OTOH, if you listen to some retro stuff like JET or some remastered Who, it cranks up very well, and the bass line and drum lines thump and the guitar's low-end (if there is any) comes through well, creating a much more...um, shall we say, developed sound that exhibits something from every instrument, because it's optomized for FM radio and modern stereos, both of which transmit mids and lows much better.
Am I insane?
Thanks
--kyle
PS: Dear gawd..it finally let me post. Wonder if I can seach now as well?
He's played guitar since probably 1966, been an electronics/TV tech since 1965 was involved with studio-quality tape recorders/machines in the early 70s. He even assembled tape machines for a while, and had to do noise and wow/flutter checks on them, and you wouldn't believe some of the things they did at the factory (like using the competition's motors).
Anyway, rambling aside, he's always said that the bass-less, mid-high focused sound was a result of the music being optimized for the poor home stereos and AM radio of the day...true? A good example I can think of would probably be The Beatles' She Loves Me
OTOH, if you listen to some retro stuff like JET or some remastered Who, it cranks up very well, and the bass line and drum lines thump and the guitar's low-end (if there is any) comes through well, creating a much more...um, shall we say, developed sound that exhibits something from every instrument, because it's optomized for FM radio and modern stereos, both of which transmit mids and lows much better.
Am I insane?
Thanks
--kyle
PS: Dear gawd..it finally let me post. Wonder if I can seach now as well?