Anyhow… it arrived and $30 well spent. You can see a list of some of the various articles contained within at this link. Sound Practices is aimed squarely at enthusiasts of vintage hi-fi, experiementers, and hobbyist builders, rather than the much more electrical-engineering-oriented Audio Amateur/Audio Electronics, another publication from the same period which frankly tends to confuse me half the time. Let’s put it this way,,, there’s not a lot of math in Sound Practices.
So what’s the point. If you’ve read this far in this post, you are likely one of my regular readers, and if you managed to make it back several times to this fairly niche website, I am pretty sure you would dig Sound Practices. Still available for $30, world-wide shipping included, on eBay.
On a closing note… an unexpected bonus for me was discovering that one of my favorite writers on the subject of vintage audio-gear was a regular contributor. I refer to one Vincent Gallo. I’ll end with a bit from his first piece in the zine, surprisingly free from the (albeit hilarious) hostility that usually marks his writing: what follows truly gets to the heart of why-antique-audio-equipment-matters, as well as a fundamental relationship between sound on the one hand and audio on the other:
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Most of the schematics and other "hard" data in SP had errors, most notably the WE 91 article in Issue 1, but in general the editing was dreadful. Joe Roberts meant well, but a misspent youth dealing with the unmitigated twaddle of Boas, Weltfish, Mead and other cultrural anthro-pseudoscientists took a terrible toll.
The magazine is worth reading for giggles and an occasional useful tidbit so long as you keep in mind that most of it was written by people who don't know what they are doing, quite literally.
And after "The Brown Bunny", Vinnie Gallo is the second most difficult person I can think of on earth to take seriously about anything. (The most difficult, and for the exact same reason, is Chloe Sevigny.)