Categories
Antique Hi-Fi Archive

This Stereo Establishes A Social Boundary That You Can Not Cross

SwissBankerAtHomeDownload the complete 36pp 1980 Studer REVOX catalog (presented in three parts due to file size):

DOWNLOAD PART 1: Revox_80_part1

DOWNLOAD PART 2: Revox_80_part2

DOWNLOAD PART 3: Revox_80_part3

Products covered, with intensely detailed text, specs, and photos, include: Revox B790 and B795 turntables; B750 integrated amp, B760 FM tuner, B780 receiver, B77 tape deck, BX4100, BX350, BR530, BR530, BR430, and BR320 speakers; the REVOX Triton sub/satellite speaker system; and a whole range of accessories.

REvox_speakers_1980REVOX was the consumer-products brand of the Swiss firm Studer; Studer being most noteable as maker of the finest multi-track analog audio tape machines in the world, machines that are still used in studios around the world everyday to make records for top artists.  OVER THIRTY YEARS after they were manufactured.  Think you’ll still be using those Lynx Convertors in thirty years?  NEways…  yeah so this is pretty solid kit.

REvox_B77Most audio-folk are familiar with the B77 tape deck, so it’s interesting to see that there was a whole line of amps, tuners and speakers arranged around it.    It’s interesting to note how the products are numbered sequentially across their ‘product-types,’ which certainly seems to encourage one to conceptualize them in unity rather than as tokens of a certain ‘kind’ of audio-hardware.

Studer_AccessoriesBut let’s talk about this catalog. Without a doubt, this is one of the most lavish and neatly designed pieces of audio ephemera I have ever come across, and y’all know I’ve seen a lot of this crap.

BustedBassWell I guess that explains it.  Let’s buy this one.

REvox_graphicWhat does this all mean?  What can we take from this layout, lighting, design, mise-en-scene… how does it all work together to create the overwhelming sense that I will never, ever, EVER be able to afford shit like this?

ScotchAndPipeThere’s a concept in semiotics called discourse.  Discourse can be understood as a social boundary that is learned through lived experience.  Discursive boundaries are established by all sorts of things, from spoken language to dress, gestures, the kind of food that one consumes, and the objects that one associates with their person.  Consider the King and his throne (above).  What does the throne say about the person who sits on it?  How do we conceptualize that relationship?  How do we describe that relationship?  I would suggest that the Revox hi-fi is a discursive marker of an extreme kind of wealth and privilege.  The way that this document reinforces this discourse through its various design and art-direction elements is fkkn masterful.  Well done, unnamed Swiss ad agency of old.  You would def get an A+ in my graphic design class (visual narratives assignment).

ShellyDONTTOUCHTHATAlright let’s get back to some pictures of old stereos.

Revox_B795 Revox_B790 revox_b750

Categories
Videos

Announcing The Preservation Sound Video Series

Video_AnnounceAlright!  So we’ve been toiling in the summer heat here on CT’s Gold Coast to get the first three Preservation Sound videos ready for ya.  Filmmaker Richard Ruggiero has put these together, and we plan on making a new show every two weeks or so.

Click on the ‘VIDEO’ tab at the top of the page to view more detailed information about each video.

And… for those you who are into this sorta thing: we’ve created a Facebook page so that you can receive auto-updates on new PS dot com pieces.  And you know what else, fukk it, I am done with tumblr, i love it but it’s a one-horse town, so yeah i’ve changed to instagram.  Expect all the same bullshit that I used to post to tumblr, but now with cliche shading/vignetting.

Click any of those lil graphic icons at the upper right to check out the new Fbook, twitter, and instagram.  Paul Weller, take us out

Issue #1

Issue #2

Issue #3

Categories
Antique Hi-Fi Archive

British Industries Corporation, US importer/marketer of UK hi fi kit c. 1955

BIC_HighFidelityPlanbookBIC_SystemGot a pretty good one for y’all today… download the 8pp B.I.C. audio catalog circa 1955:

DOWNLOAD: BIC_Audio_195X

Products covered, with text, specs, and photos, include: Garrard RC88, RC98, RC121, 301, model T Crest phonographs; LEAK TL/10, TL12, and TL/25 amplifiers; Genalex KT-66 and Z729 tubes; Wharfdale W15/CS, W12/CS, Super 12 CS, W10/CSB, Super 8/CS/AL, and Super 3 treble speakers; the Wharfdale Briggs corner enclosure; plus a range of enclosures from R-J and River Edge.

Wharfdale_Drivers Leak_TL12 Leak_TL10 Genelex_KT66 BIC_Cabinets

Categories
Pro Audio Archive

360 Systems model 2800 programmable EQ

360_2800_EQDownload the 2PP spec-sheet for the very obscure 360 systems Model 2800 programmable 4-band parametric EQ:

DOWNLOAD: 360_EQ

Four channels, fully parametric, with filters that offer +12 db/ -infinity (notch) operation, and 28 memory locations.  The pre-plug-in plug-in.  Anyone?

360_2800_eq_specs

Categories
Pro Audio Archive

Audio Obscurity: The VSC Analog Pitch Correction System C. 1980

VSC_M8CDownload four pages of documentation regarding the M8 series of analog pitch-correction devices from the VSC corporation:

DOWNLOAD: VSC_Ana_Pitch_Cntrl

There were three models of these devices offered:  the ready-made M8-C (above), which offered a pitch-shift range of 0.6x to 4.0x (with glorious 300-5Khz bandwidth); the M8-A was a expansion-only module, and the M8-B was a compression-only module.

VSC_M8bIf the idea of completely analog real-time pitch-shifting is not wacky enough for ya, how about mechanical pitch shifting?  See this earlier post

Categories
Uncategorized

Live DJ Set Tonite Wed 7.24.13 New Haven CT

BIC_301How y’all doing…  tonight I’ll be behind the Garrard 301’s at Firehouse 12 in New Haven Connecticut, joining mi hermano Sway for another night of dark old rock soul + psych.  Come on down to the best bar in CT and expand yr horizons, man.

UNSPUN at Firehouse 12

45 Crown St New Haven CT

Categories
Custom Fabrication

Another Carbon Mic Power Supply

CarbonPS_TopCarbonPS_FrontHere is a one-of-a-kind unit using a re-purposed Thordarson transformer.  IT works great, and the vintage Shurite (made in New Haven CT!!!) DC voltmeter is a bonus.

CarbonPS_MeterCarbonPS_TerminalsOn the ‘business-end’ (topmost image) you can see XLR output jack (for connection to the input of your mic preamp), on/off switch, pot for controlling the DC voltage that mic receives, and at right the cable-exit for the seven-foot cable harness that connects to your double-button carbon mic.  At right: red and black wires connect one-to-each button, and the clear wire connects to the metal shell of the mic.

For an explanation of WTF this thing is, and why you might possibly need it in your life, see this previous post.

Categories
Microphones

RCA’s ‘Starmaker’-brand prosumer mics of the 70’s

Starmaker_RCADownload an eight-panel catalog for the RCA “Starmaker” lineup of 1970s prosumer microphones:

DOWNLOAD: RCA_Starmaker_Mics

Not to be confused with the RCA BK-4 “Starmaker” hand-held ribbon mic of the 1950s, these later Starmakers were cheap prosumer and consumer units.  Models on offer included the Starmaker 96, 97, 98, 101, 99, and 100.  The top-of-the-range 96 has decent specs and useful features; gonna keep an eye out for that one.

RCA_Starmaker_96

Categories
Pro Audio Archive

The Ecoplate Reverb c. 1980

EcoPlateApparently built by a company called Programming Technologies (anyone???) and sold by Wes Dooley’s AEA firm, the Ecoplate is a well-regarded unit which has a pretty impressive frequency response for a mechanical reverb.  If anyone out there is still using one of these, drop us a line with yr thoughts.

Ecoplate Freq Respone Ecoplate_p1

 

Categories
Pro Audio Archive

MicMix “Master Room” 210 and 305 Spring Reverbs C. 1979

MasterRoom_305Download 8pp of sales + technical information regarding the “Master Room” XL-210 and XL-305 stereo spring reverbs manufactured in 1979 by MicMix of Dallas Texas.

DOWNLOAD:MicMix_210_305_reverbs

MasterRoom_210The 210 was the economy model.  The 305 had optional balancing transformers.  I regularly use a couple of other contemporary spring reverbs (Orban and Sound Workshop) but I’ve never had a MicMix unit.  Anyone?

MicMix_305