![]() |
> chat room > multimedia > shopping > photos > programs > surprise > previous surprises > email list |
Surprise - Master Tape Storage Jethro Tull has produced a lot of songs over the years and the great
majority of those came in the era of tape, the brown, non-sticky kind
for those of you too young to remember. Such tapes are rather fragile,
and many artists have lost precious recordings to the
harshness of years. The tapes The remastering process depends on these tapes. Ian spends a lot of time reviewing these before shipment to the famed Abbey Road Studio for production and preservation to digital form. Many tapes have to be "baked" which is a special process to remove oxide build-up. Such techniques can be very destructive. Very old blues recordings, for example, being remastered by Tull's USA label, Fuel 2000, are immediately destroyed by the very preservation technique. One slip up and no more Delta blues classic. Forever. Older tapes tend to be worse but not always. The last years of tape in the early 1980's were particularly bad due to poor production quality. Ian tells how the tape was so horrid on "Black Sunday" (on "A" album) that it was unusable within a few days after recording. Remember "A Passion Play" ? Well, amazingly that tape required no preservation work at all in the remastering, a finding that even shocked Ian (and concerned him a bit too for if the production engineer was wrong...).
|
||
|
|
| >> back to top | ||
|
The entire content of this site is protected by applicable copyright law. Copyright © 2007. Jethrotull.com. All Rights Reserved. To report problems with this website, email webmaster@jethrotull.com |