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dakareedog
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dakareedog said:I would like to know what station (s) were V/Ting in the 70's. Please explain how this was done.
TheBigA said:dakareedog said:I would like to know what station (s) were V/Ting in the 70's. Please explain how this was done.
Pre-taping on reel to reel. Some would pre-tape their breaks, others would pre-tape entire shows in real time.
Then of course you had those stations carrying pre-taped automation formats from Bonneville, Schulke, and other format distributors. I don't have affiliate lists, but I recall Bonneville saying they had about 300 clients. Marlin Taylor ran that operation in Tenafly NJ.
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So, some "body" still had to be there to Q the tape and play the records OR it was automated.
dakareedog said:So, some "body" still had to be there to Q the tape and play the records OR it was automated.
TheBigA said:I was a stockholder with Citadel before the ABC deal. I disagreed with the merger and sold out. Good move for me. However, the situation with Citadel and Cumulus is not comparable. The Cumulus debt is just fine, spread out among equity partners who all share in the risk. They actually have access to even more cash that allows them some breathing room, or a chance to buy more stuff.
dfaulkner said:A number of FM's were automated in the 70's. But, I think, voicetracking is more recent technology.
TheBigA said:dfaulkner said:A number of FM's were automated in the 70's. But, I think, voicetracking is more recent technology.
The method is new. The purpose is the same. They didn't have computers in the 70s. But a lot of stations didn't want to pay DJs either.
TheBigA said:We're talking about 40 years ago. This was pre-computer. Automation was triggered by sub-audible tones or cue tape. Then again, back then actual people sewed the clothes you wear. Today it's all done by machine. Or in another country.
dakareedog said:I would like to know what station (s) were V/Ting in the 70's. Please explain how this was done.
DavidEduardo said:Probably more than half the commercial FMs in the 70's were what we now call voice tracked.
dfaulkner said:That will be interesting to find out. Maybe voicetracking isn't what the poster meant. A number of FM's were automated in the 70's. But, I think, voicetracking is more recent technology.
TheBigA said:OHTBGH said:Hopefully, Cumulus will not make the same mistakes. But now two companies have come together and created MORE debt service!
I was a stockholder with Citadel before the ABC deal. I disagreed with the merger and sold out. Good move for me. However, the situation with Citadel and Cumulus is not comparable. The Cumulus debt is just fine, spread out among equity partners who all share in the risk. They actually have access to even more cash that allows them some breathing room, or a chance to buy more stuff.
Something happened between Farid and Forstmann that cost them the company. Forstmann could have bailed Citadel out, and didn't. That will make an interesting book some day.
DavidEduardo said:TheBigA said:dfaulkner said:A number of FM's were automated in the 70's. But, I think, voicetracking is more recent technology.
The method is new. The purpose is the same. They didn't have computers in the 70s. But a lot of stations didn't want to pay DJs either.
For those not around in the 70's, here is one way voice tracks were done...
A cart, often with multiple cuts, was recorded with intros to all the currents that required them. Often the secondary tone on the cart was set to roll the song under the intro according to how long it was. The automation played (in some systems) a linked element of the intro cart and the song cart.
Then the backsells before commercials and the IDs if given live were put on carts, and they included the proper content for the hour and day.
Finally, contests and liners were put on carts. Cuts might be recorded for a board op to put contest winners into a prerecord to put them on the air.
Mid-70's automation could do that. A bit later, systems like Harris' System 9000 could even handle music rotations and such.
Instead of playing off a computer, the tracks were played off carts.
At my first job, where it was discovered I had no future as a jock, I ran a personality jazz show. The PD "tracked" the show by pulling all the albums and doing an intro for each cut on reel to reel, and we certainly referred to the the reel as the "voice track" or "the voicers" and said that the show was "tracked." That takes voice tracking back about 50 years or so. The technology is simpler, but the result is the same.
OHTBGH said:They may have cash now. But all it takes is a tremor in market forces and credit is screwed and people will park the cash.
That was after the bankruptcy. You don't appear to know who his main investors were.OHTBGH said:He did a deal that only benefited himself. And even tried to block sales to keep his position.
jondavidvox said:In short, Radio is a combination of the Arts, Sciences, and Business....When any of those parts are over-emphasized, the sum suffers. Like now...