CarstenKuss
Group: Musicians
Posts: 362
Joined: Nov. 1999 |
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Posted: Aug. 29 2002, 18:57 |
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Hello all, I have a problem.
You know, the history of pop music goes hand-in-hand with recording technology. And Mike has always been state-of-the art. Some other artists have, too.
As a private fun project, I'm currently working on a timeline of recording technology and pop history. Like, interactions between technological innovations and musicians' careers. You know what I'm talking about?
Now, my exact question is: IN WHAT WAY WAS MIKE A PIONEER IN MULTITRACK TAPE RECORDING?
To be more specific: - We know that Les Paul introduced Sound-On-Sound recording in 1949, recording up to 37 generations with a bouncing-technique using 2 Ampex-machines. - We know that in 1964-1967 Lawrence Horn of Motown used a standardized bouncing-technique to record 8 tracks on 3-track tape. - We also know that Tubular Bells wasn't bounced but recorded on so-many tracks, or am I totally cloth-eared here?
BUT: When did tape-recording evolve from stereo to 4-track, to 8-track, to ... 24-track? What studios, and what artists, used this before 1972?
The Web seems to have a black-out at this point. At least, I could find nothing!
Anybody? KORGSCREW?
-------------- -Carsten-
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