Title: | You get surface noise in real life too |
Notice: | Let's be conformist |
Moderator: | GOVT02::BARKER |
Created: | Thu Jul 28 1988 |
Last Modified: | Mon Jun 02 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 550 |
Total number of notes: | 3847 |
Copied from Studio Sound April 1994 issue - the Martin Polon column - without permission. FUTURE FORMATS: THE REAL COST OF ILL-CONCEIVED MARKETING. For many reasons the recording Studio today, while not exactly an endangered species, is not the financially stable proposition it once was. Let's face it, the consumer audio business is functional but the relatively steady-state status of the record industry is not creating prodigious numbers of studio sessions prepping or recording new groups. And one of the worst moves made by the world record industry - in conjunction with the shakers and movers who populate the world's consumer audio manufacturers - has been to entertain the battle between the MiniDisc (MD) and the Digital Compact Cassette (DCC) formats. The problem is, it is difficult to calculate whose death could really be occasioned by a clash between two formats destined to be DOA (Dead On Arrival) - if the current level of interest prevails. Unintentionally and only by inadvertent error, the public have received a faint message from the 'sell' campaign for the two formats that maybe the Compact Disc itself is somehow flawed and on its way out. And the record companies carry some of the blame for secretly hoping that one or both of the new formats would replace DAT and-or bring about the'still birth' of Recordable Compact Disc and subsequently end their home copying 'paranoia' forever - since neither the DCC or MD formats deliver anything close to sonic perfection. In a recent survey of advertising lineage in newspapers and editorial comment from July 1993 to early 1994, less than 1% of the space devoted to audio electronics was dedicated to MD and DCC. In fact, the survey team considered the MD-DCC numbers to be 'statistically not important.' Of the editorial material in the 'general' press as opposed to the specialist audio press, the same survey in the same period indicated that positive comments about either system were far less than expected - averaging less that 50% of the total. Even within the consumer audio press, negative commentary focused on high price tags, high blank media costs, psychoacoustic encoding and bit-rate reduction techniques, and the paucity of prerecorded titles both in terms of numbers and of titles focused on the more mature buyers who could afford the formats' prices. Many record stores that had devoted prime retail space to MD and DCC upon release. have since rethought their posture and either removed these products to a less important location in the store - thus freeing the space for the fast moving CD and Cassette titles or else reduced the size of the stock or removed DCC and MD altogether. The same audio industry 'experts' who heralded the inception of MD or DCC last year are now announcing that DAT is DOA in the consumer electronics audio marketplace of the 1990s. At the January 1994 Winter Consumer Electronics Show (CES), several well-known 'experts and spokespersons' for major audio equipment manufacturers delivered sombre pronouncements as to the passing of the DAT format for home recording. Curiously, these same manufacturers avoid reporting what retailers still acknowledge - that is that DAT sales are still 'respectable' in the advanced audiophile marketplace. In fact, some US stores specialing in DAT have moved their clientele up to so-called broadcast and recording-studio-quality DATs at twice the price of consumer gear. The superior characteristics of DAT still attracts those enthusiasts that the record companies insist do not exist: the 'original recordist.' The same pronouncements as to the demise of DAT suggest that CD/R will be delivered 'still-born' to the consumer marketplace and that even the CD is 'dead' for the car market. The assumption offered at the Consumer Electronics Show in Chicago is that since the'new' MD players utilise a 4-disc 'clip' that allows CD Changer-like performance, there is no need for the larger and bulkier trunk-mount CD Changer for in-car use. As to the inability of CD/R to survive introduction to the consumer market, there is less clear prognosis from audio the current $3,000 price floor, anything is possible in this 'best of all possible worlds'. Dolby S cassette decks, especially the multi motor, multiple head models upsteam from more conventional implementations, are beginning to gather momentum and could challenge any new digital format introduced. This is especially true in terms of the compatibility with the public's trusted Philips' analogue-cassette format and because of the high quality of the recorded sound. Those of us in the pro-audio business must not forget that the number of record releases utilising Dolby SR, the professional progenitor of Dolby S, has equalled or outnumbered those done in the digital domain for four of the last five years worldwide. Those promoting the 'information superhighway' have announced that any and all of these formats are obsolete anyway since the direct digital delivery of audio on 20 or so digital channels will replace buying music on prerecorded formats. Apparently, music copyright holders believe these pronouncements since they have gone back to US Congress for a new royalty package designed to deal with audio'infomania' amongst other things. In a recent US study of audio hardware sales to focus on the success or failure of MiniDisc and-or DCC turned up some interesting numbers. For example, at one of the top consumer audio equipment retailers in a major East Coast city, there have been 12 Minidisc units with recording features sold during the last six months. On the other hand, there are 24 DAT machines on back order, with nearly 50 DAT machines already sold during the same time period. One factor ostensibly invisible to most in the world's audio industry is that the traditional connection between Japanese development of new audio products for the Nippon domestic market and its enthusiastic and affluent audiophiles has been more or less broken. So has the traditional product release and development cycles of 'year one in Japan with debut at the Tokyo Hi-fi Show, year two in England and Europe with introduction at Festival Du Son and the London Hi-fi Show and year three in the United States with release at the Winter or Summer CES. Another factor that influences the development of new audio products in Japan is the recessive state of the Japanese economy, and the impact that has had on the well-paid audiophiles who used to be the number one target of Japan's audio equipment makers. Aside from the issues raised above, as Japan's audio makers have 'gone global' in their outlook, fear of loss of employment has refocused Japan's 'salary men' from their hobbies to the more prosaic issues of economic survival. With this change, Japanese equipment makers trying to contend with their economic retrenchment, have less lassitude in new product introduction. Make no mistake about it, each of the Japanese equipment manufacturers will survive financially with whatever product line it takes to do so. Whether it is CD/R, DAT, DCC, Dolby S, MD or some other newer format, the big equipment-makers will commit to a winner and have, in fact, already 'hedged' most, if not all, of their 'bets' on the one system or the other. A savvy US record-store owner offered her opinion recently: 'one factor that is being completely overlooked is the reaction by women to both these new formats. Contrary to popular male belief, women do not just spend their lives buying recordings but .... the women have absolutely no interest in MiniDisc and virtually no interest in DCC. Despite the presence of nearly 300 titles for MD, they are all pointed towards a male youth market. What the marketeers forget, is that young women have and keep more money than the young men by a long shot. And with few of the 300 titles pointed towards to over 30s, no-one with any affluence has any reason to consider the format .... since none of the content is pointed in their direction! Yet the hardware is all priced well beyond the affordability of the young males targeted by the content.' We end where we began: the adoption of a reliable single standard for any product area will make adequate profitability for all concerned. The best example of this are the Philip's analogue audio cassette and the Sony 3.5-inch diskette. Both have become universal standards. Not to mention that a new standard digital audio format for portable recording and playback would give the entire music industry from recording studio to record store a major league shot-in-the-arm - even if it should turn out to be Minidisc, with PASC encoding. Verbatim except for typo's I hope this is of interest to someone. Malcolm.
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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477.1 | ESBS01::WATSON | Entropy: chaos at it's best | Tue May 17 1994 14:48 | 1 | |
Thanks Malcolm, it was of interest to me. | |||||
477.2 | Interesting indeed | COMICS::FLANDERSD | I remember the look in your eye | Wed May 18 1994 13:38 | 5 |
Why not standardize on a 96kHz DAT and get decent sound quality (and not throw away information !!) DjF | |||||
477.3 | Better still, 96kHz AND 24 bit whilst you're up. | SUBURB::POWELLM | Nostalgia isn't what it used to be! | Wed May 18 1994 14:32 | 1 |
477.4 | Pioneer DAT/mics/revox B77 HS | UFHIS::JMASLEN | The wheels fallen off your day yet?! | Fri Aug 19 1994 14:55 | 13 |
Gidday folks, Has anybody reviewed/know about the Pioneer DAT machine that works at 96khz sampling? Also, has anybody got any pointers to microphones: reviews/ for sale etc, I am looking at cardiods for live small jazz/ chamber concert/performances. Also looking for a high speed Revox B77...........anyone know of one around? many thanks fjeff | |||||
477.5 | High Speed Revox? I can probably provide DAT info too. | SUBURB::POWELLM | Nostalgia isn't what it used to be! | Fri Aug 19 1994 17:49 | 9 |
Whaja wanna high speed Revox for den? Do you mean 15/30 IPS? Do you mean IEC or NAB Eq machine? I have a virtually brand new Revox 7.5/15 IPS IEC machine, but what are you thinking? Malcolm. (830-2864 or Malcolm Powell @REO) | |||||
477.6 | Revox Reels are a dying breed. | UFHIS::JMASLEN | The wheels fallen off your day yet?! | Tue Aug 23 1994 12:04 | 9 |
Yup, Your machine is the one Iam looking for....not sure about the NAB or IEC eq yet....I'll have to enquire in NZ as a collegue is about to buy one as well...so we have to decide which machine type to buy. cheers fjeff DTN 865 3922 | |||||
477.7 | Open reel ain't dying yet! | SUBURB::POWELLM | Nostalgia isn't what it used to be! | Tue Aug 23 1994 15:57 | 10 |
<<< Note 477.6 by UFHIS::JMASLEN "The wheels fallen off your day yet?!" >>> -< Revox Reels are a dying breed. >- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Have to take issue with that bit Jeff, Revox are still selling the jolly old B77 MkII AND the PR99 open reel jobbies. They will go on doing so until you can "cut and splice" on DAT without a digital editor too, I reckon! Malcolm. | |||||
477.8 | Cheap at quarter the price! | BLKPUD::WILLIAMSH | Flat tank Sunbeam rider | Wed Jan 04 1995 13:50 | 21 |
I've recently bought a Marantz DD-82 DCC player and am VERY pleased with it. It was in What-Hifi's 1993 awards as best tape deck for �500-750, and was orignally sold for �650. I got it from a mail order firm in the back of What-Hifi for �180. Richer Sounds will be selling them for 199.95 If anything, making digital recordings of CDs sounds better than my CD player. This is beacuse my CD player is a 6 year old multibit, whereas the DCC player has the latest bitstream DACs, giving much grater clarity. The improvement is such that I now use the monitor button on the DCC deck to take the digital output from the CD player and use the bitstream DACs to listen to my CD collection. Apart from spot-on recordings, the feature of a DAC upgrade is an unexpected bonus. Huw. | |||||
477.9 | Emma Chisit? | MILE::JENKINS | Get yourself a thesaurus | Wed Jan 04 1995 18:15 | 5 |
How much are tapes? How do they compare with DAT/Mini-Disc prices? Ta, Richard. | |||||
477.10 | SUBURB::TAFF::Wob | Robert Screene, UK Finance EUC | Thu Jan 05 1995 09:18 | 7 | |
Huw, What digital inputs does it have? The little fiber optic TOSlink or a coaxial phono? Cheers, Rob. | |||||
477.11 | more info | BLKPUD::WILLIAMSH | Flat tank Sunbeam rider | Thu Jan 05 1995 11:27 | 18 |
>> How much are tapes? Blank tapes are �~4 mail order, or about �5-6 in the high street. minidiscs seem to be �~7 mail order. >> What digital inputs does it have? The little fiber optic TOSlink or >> a coaxial phono? Both. In all it has 3 Inputs: Analogue phono, digital coaxial phono & fiber optic It has 4 outputs: Analogue phono (fixed), variable level analogue phono, digital coaxial phono & fiber optic. Huw. PS. it also has Dolby B&C for analogue tape playback. | |||||
477.12 | You can DIY | AZUR::DESOZA | Jean-Pierre Sophia-Antipolis, DTN 828-5559 | Thu Jan 05 1995 14:33 | 3 |
Although I am unable to describe the exact operations, I have read that you could make regular tapes DCC compatible by boring a hole in the cassette. Where and how big? I can't tell you but I am sure of the possibility. | |||||
477.13 | Friday night experimentation | BLKPUD::WILLIAMSH | Flat tank Sunbeam rider | Tue Jan 10 1995 13:54 | 21 |
>>make regular tapes DCC compatible by boring a hole in the cassette Well, I had a go at this the other night. It works, sort of...... It requires three holes in the cassette case. They are about 3mm diameter, and about 2 mm deep, they can be 'blind'. i.e you need not bore right through the cassette shell. Best thing I found was a Vero board track cutter which makes holes about 3.5 mm. I assumed that the position of the 3 holes told it 1) DCC 2) Writeable/no-protect 3) D90 The player was conned into thinking they were DCC tapes. I tried six tape types in all, the best being a MAXELL XLII (Cr02), this would play but would skip and drop out, a bit like a dirty CD player. Some tapes eg. TDK MA would play back with complete silence. I guess that the DCC's equalisation bias and tape particle hysteresis characteristics are not matched by analogue tapes. I guess I'll stick to proper DCC tapes at four quid fifty a throw. Huw. |