Particularly dance!Impossible. Nothing sounds great on AM.
Particularly dance!Impossible. Nothing sounds great on AM.
AM sounded just as bad in 1997 as it does today. In fact, it has sounded that bad for the last 100 years, give or take.It was 1997.
Could you imagine what your average AM clipper does with all the subharmonics contained within EDM? THD=40% IMD=60%.AM sounded just as bad in 1997 as it does today. In fact, it has sounded that bad for the last 100 years, give or take.
Few alive today remember, let alone care.Back in 1997 there were still plenty of cars with wideband C-Quam AM Stereo tuners, which gave it a fighting chance of sounding decent.
How long ago was that? And where are they today? Still playing EDM? Didn't think so.The Beat Radio affiliate in the NYC area (1660 WJDM in Elizabeth, NJ) transmitted in AM Stereo.
Hasn't Westport gotten a bit downscale in recent years? On recent visits to KC, it's seemed to me that the action is now in the Power & Light District and the nearby Crossroads area adjacent to Union Station south of downtown. I understand there have been some issues with crime in Westport as well.Some stations in Kansas City used to have live remotes from a bar district called Westport on weekends in the late 90s/early 2000s. I don't know when they stopped but the last time I was partying in Westport, there weren't any remotes going on.
Westport is pretty bad, especially at night. I was close to there in Midtown and a bar there had a sign in neon lights that said "Please don't do coke in the bathroom."Hasn't Westport gotten a bit downscale in recent years? On recent visits to KC, it's seemed to me that the action is now in the Power & Light District and the nearby Crossroads area adjacent to Union Station south of downtown. I understand there have been some issues with crime in Westport as well.
But back to "Beat Radio" - the Chicago affiliate was WAUR in Aurora, which had a noisy signal in the city proper. I have tapes, and haven't bothered digitizing them because it didn't sound that great due to conditions just before sunset when I was recording at my lakefront location. Beat Radio was a placeholder anyway after Radio Aahs imploded.
The dance audience seems very enthusiastic about the genre but it's also very small in numbers for actual listening - in part, because it's music not designed to be listened to but, instead, to provide the beat for dancing - by definition.
Here's an example of what EDM actually sounds like on a wideband AM mono receiver. The station's audio processor is an Optimod 9200:Could you imagine what your average AM clipper does with all the subharmonics contained within EDM? THD=40% IMD=60%.
Her board obviously has no faders, just on and off switches!Here's an example of what EDM actually sounds like on a wideband AM mono receiver. The station's audio processor is an Optimod 9200:
KLOK San Jose?Here's an example of what EDM actually sounds like on a wideband AM mono receiver. The station's audio processor is an Optimod 9200:
Sounds like distorted, over-processed hash alright. Can't even hear the beats over mid range synth, which makes sense. And David is right, what's with the sudden break-in and out with that announcer? Me thinks this is likely a doctored recording.Here's an example of what EDM actually sounds like on a wideband AM mono receiver. The station's audio processor is an Optimod 9200:
Part of the problem is nobody give a dman these days about keeping RF noise low. It's amazing during the times the power goes out how quiet the noise floor becomes.AM sounded just as bad in 1997 as it does today. In fact, it has sounded that bad for the last 100 years, give or take.
Pretty much.Anymore, anytime I read what the people who care about AM stereo, in numbers what can be counted on one hand, I hear them speaking in the voice of Dustin Hoffman in Rain Man.
Oh please, lighten up and imagine the text as spoken: "DAB bitrates are too low." "Serious injury book is a red book, that book is blue."On UK radio discussion sites, you can generally count the number of posts before any given topic, no matter what the original subject, becomes a discussion of the bitrates in use on DAB radio.
Here, you can count the number of posts before a topic becomes a debate about AM, AM Stereo, declining listenership and audio quality, normally with some fairly questionable comments about autism (the endless "Rain Man" quips from one member).
No, it's just a low-budget AM daytimer (WWTR), most of whose DJs are volunteers.And David is right, what's with the sudden break-in and out with that announcer? Me thinks this is likely a doctored recording.
Is she providing you with anything specifically local to your area -- news, meeting notices, school lunch menus, weather reports, high school sports scores -- that a professional voicetracker or satellite-fed DJ wouldn't be able to? What value does a giggly volunteer DJ with a thick accent (Asian Subcontinent?) bring to the table even when it comes to the music? She's talking over it, so even if she is saying something interesting about the song, it's impossible to understand.No, it's just a low-budget AM daytimer (WWTR), most of whose DJs are volunteers.
And when she did try to talk over the music without ducking it, it didn't turn out too well:
Still, I'd rather have a live, local personality than a voice track or satellite feed, even if their board technique needs more practice.
Then it really doesn't count.No, it's just a low-budget AM daytimer (WWTR), most of whose DJs are volunteers.
More practice? More like any technique.Still, I'd rather have a live, local personality than a voice track or satellite feed, even if their board technique needs more practice.
"We offer a unique blend of programming in English and other South Asian languages, courtesy of a team of RJ’s that cater to all South Asian ethnicities. They transcend age groups and boundaries by providing listeners with a sense of individuality and exposure to their particular culture. EBC is much more than Music, Talk, and News. We also get the community together with events and regional shows."Is she providing you with anything specifically local to your area -- news, meeting notices, school lunch menus, weather reports, high school sports scores -- that a professional voicetracker or satellite-fed DJ wouldn't be able to? What value does a giggly volunteer DJ with a thick accent (Asian Subcontinent?) bring to the table even when it comes to the music?
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