[78-L] Wax!
Matthew Duncan
duncdude2000 at yahoo.com
Fri Nov 27 17:26:08 PST 2009
Sounds like the Tempo label but not 100% sure...
--- On Sat, 28/11/09, David Lennick <dlennick at sympatico.ca> wrote:
From: David Lennick <dlennick at sympatico.ca>
Subject: Re: [78-L] Wax!
To: "78-L Mail List" <78-l at klickitat.78online.com>
Date: Saturday, 28 November, 2009, 0:44
Norman Field, who left this forum about 3 years ago and keeps forgetting to
come back, tells of an early LP session for a British jazz label where they
didn't even have TAPE yet, so it was direct to disc.
dl
Royal Pemberton wrote:
> Didn't I read somewhere that UK Decca cut their earliest LP masters on wax?
>
> On Fri, Nov 27, 2009 at 6:15 PM, David Lennick <dlennick at sympatico.ca>wrote:
>
>> Michael Biel wrote:
>>> Kristjan Saag wrote:
>>>> A newsreel from 1949 about production of shellac records in Germany.
>>>>
>> http://www.teledb.com/4/wdsMb1pwJEw/0/0/-herstellung-einer-schellackplatte.html
>>>> Made from wax masters. I've heard of late use of wax masters in Britain
>> and
>>>> Sweden as well. Was there any particular reason to continue with wax
>> almost
>>>> 20 years after the introduction of acetates?
>>>> Kristjan
>>> Wax was easier to cut than LACQUERS, and the styli used to cut lacquers
>>> required burnishing facets (invented by Isabel Capps) and heated styli
>>> for best results.
>>>
>>> Mike Biel mbiel at mbiel.com
>> Some folks just don't like to change to new-fangled inventions. The CBC
>> Archives was still cutting lacquers for its "preserve forever" copies as
>> late
>> as 1967. Microgroove yet.
>>
>> dl
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