
miroslav
Cosmic Cowboy
I wouldn't trust music only to tape for 40 years (unless you have good tape to start and you really take care of it)...but I certainly would and do now have 3-4 different formats *and the playback devices for each*.
That said...it's really not much of an issue.
Rarely does technology just go bad or disappear overnight. So if you do have a R2R deck and some tape...just check it every so often (don't wait 40 years before the next play
), and if it starts going bad on you, dump all the music to whatever is the most current format(s).
Actually...I would say vinyl might outlast the tape and the digital formats over time...but it too must be well cared for and protected just like anything. Not sure how something like a high-end digital format would stack against vinyl (for pure longevity and archive purposes.)
Right now my final audio masters get archived to DVD, but I also have the digital files on CD/DVD and of course all the original tracking tapes.
That said...it's really not much of an issue.
Rarely does technology just go bad or disappear overnight. So if you do have a R2R deck and some tape...just check it every so often (don't wait 40 years before the next play

Actually...I would say vinyl might outlast the tape and the digital formats over time...but it too must be well cared for and protected just like anything. Not sure how something like a high-end digital format would stack against vinyl (for pure longevity and archive purposes.)
Right now my final audio masters get archived to DVD, but I also have the digital files on CD/DVD and of course all the original tracking tapes.