I was thinking about this a while ago, and again last night. How did older automation systems work? Here's how I invision a system from the 70s, I imagine it in one of several ways,
1. PD is at the reel-to-reel decks winding tape, then when a song is over he has to press a key on the cart machine to play the sounder, then goes back to winding tape into the reel-to-reel machine.
2. Similar to 1 above, except PD winds both machines with audio tape, sounders and commercials on one, music on the other. Cross-fading was determined by how much blank tape was wound into the second machine.
3. This one probably requires the most work, PD programs the system remotely. Have 4 reel-to-reel systems in a room, 2 that record audio onto the third, then played by the fourth. Say PD has one machine running music on the left, and one with sounders and commercials on the right, feeding into the middle one. I should probably mention that it would make sense that these 3 machines should be about 3% faster than the other machine, which is putting the audio out on the air. Am I even close? Then, when CDs were being used, how was cross-fading controlled? Even in some computer automation systems today I don't see how it can sound so seemless, seems as if cross-fading is when one song fades out and the next one fades in. How close am I on this? With an audio editor, I can manage to get things to sound like over the radio, but how does it do it today and how did it work in the past?
1. PD is at the reel-to-reel decks winding tape, then when a song is over he has to press a key on the cart machine to play the sounder, then goes back to winding tape into the reel-to-reel machine.
2. Similar to 1 above, except PD winds both machines with audio tape, sounders and commercials on one, music on the other. Cross-fading was determined by how much blank tape was wound into the second machine.
3. This one probably requires the most work, PD programs the system remotely. Have 4 reel-to-reel systems in a room, 2 that record audio onto the third, then played by the fourth. Say PD has one machine running music on the left, and one with sounders and commercials on the right, feeding into the middle one. I should probably mention that it would make sense that these 3 machines should be about 3% faster than the other machine, which is putting the audio out on the air. Am I even close? Then, when CDs were being used, how was cross-fading controlled? Even in some computer automation systems today I don't see how it can sound so seemless, seems as if cross-fading is when one song fades out and the next one fades in. How close am I on this? With an audio editor, I can manage to get things to sound like over the radio, but how does it do it today and how did it work in the past?