Grew up during the 8 track and cassette era. When I purchased my Sony TC 203SD cassette player for home use to transfer some of my albums from LP to tape, I was shocked at the sound quality difference of my transfers vs the commercial bought tapes of the same albums. All of this was coming from a mid priced cassette recorder. I say mid priced, although $400 was a lot of money for a college student. This format served me well through the years. Still have it set up in my vintage rack system.
RIP Mr. Ottens
Hey!
Yes, cassette can sound very good indeed. The problem with commercial prerecorded cassette beside using type I tape, is that they are dubbing at high speed. And I've heard that in the mid '90s on they are dubbed from digital file also.
Talk about sound quality of rerecorded cassette. A few years ago I was at flea market here in NYC and there was a box full of cassettes, look like the sell just tossed them in. I went through it and found Vivaldi's Four Season with Iona Brown and Academy of St. Martin in the Fields. Although I've never heard this version before but since this is one of my all time favorite classical piece and it was only $1 I can't see why not. I play it and I love Iona Brown performance! And the sound was great nice and full. So, I thought I should find an LP of this version, thinking LP will sound better. So, I got it and to my surprise the LP sounds thinner and the bass seems rolled off! So, yes cassettes can sound very good.
Anyway, I hope that Mr. Ottens know that some new albums in recent years are available on cassette again. I'm actually surprised by that.
Buddy