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Speaking of backwards music, listen to Electric Light Orchestra, Fire on High, from the LP Eldorado. You will hear backwards music and verse. When played backwards, the message is revealed "The music is reversable, but time is not. Turn back, turn back, turn back.......I always wanted to tell somebody that one!Wayner
so playing a 2 track tape on the Teac 4 track machine I would hook up #1 and #3 to the left and right stereo inputs on my preamp?
thanks for the repliesso playing a 2 track tape on the Teac 4 track machine I would hook up #1 and #3 to the left and right stereo inputs on my preamp?no blend feature on my deck, looking on ebay for a manual I saw a simular model with meters and pots for recording, the unit I have only has the top part of the tape machine ie:no recording controls, sounds like I need to look for a two track model w/ blend feature to really enjoy the tapes I havewondering how good the sound of these tapes are to begin with?good recall on the ELO, I saw them in concert at the now long gone Capitol Center in Wash DC area, it was a great live show
Before you go selling off tapes:If there is a headphone jack on the deck, thread up one of the 4-track tapes and see (hear) what you get. If you get stuff going forwards and backwards simultaneously, then you know what you have. There's no telling what kind of heads the deck has until you play them.
see photos, front of box say's stereo, side of box say's 4 track
Since the label doesn't mention anything about "Quadraphonic" or "QUAD", I think it's safe to say that these are standard "consumer issue" releases in 1/4-track format. In this case, playing tracks One and Three should give you a Left and Right Output. At the end of the tape, you would flip the tape over to play the second pair of tracks. (You would still play tracks One and Three on the Teac.) Tracks Two and Four will Output "Backwards Audio" from the other pair of tracks. You don't need a mixer. Just use the Audio from Tracks One and Three and you should be fine. Almost ALL "consumer issue" releases by the major record labels were issued in 1/4-track Stereo. The better record labels issued them at 7 1/2 ips. The cheapskates put 'em out at 3 3/4 ips. There was a *significant* difference in the quality between the two speeds. Reel-to-reel releases never approached *anything* close to "mass acceptance" in the marketplace. They were actually considered by many to be rather "high-end" at the time. (Just think, no ticks or scratches!) The "Compact Cassette" put an end to open-reel issues within a few years of its introduction. (Not to mention the Lear Stereo 8-track format for mobile use.) Open-reel releases were generally several generations away from the original Mixdown Master Tape. Most record labels would NEVER ship a true "Master Tape" "out of house" but usually made a copy for the Tape house. Once that copy was received at the duplicating facility, a copy was made as a "Safety Copy" and another copy was used as the "Dubbing Master." If the duplicating house used a "bin-loader" endless-loop system, an additional generation loss was usually necessary. The final high-speed copy could EASILY be a fourth or fifth generation away from the "Mixdown "Master." Still, except for a somewhat elevated noise level, they sounded pretty-darned good when played on a properly aligned machine. The REALLY good ones sounded outstanding! Enjoy!Bill