JimPastrick said:
From the Pastrick Archives (aka that radio junk in the basement), I selected Chicago's "Saturday In The Park" 45 (b/w "Alma Mater") on Columbia (brittle plastic) and the Carpenters' "I Won't Last A Day Without You" (DJ copy, mono/stereo, flexible vinyl) on A&M. No q-burn on the Carpenters, mild q-burn on Chicago.
Memories...I have both of those 45's in my collection and for some reason had both a stock copy and DJ copy of "I Won't Last A Day Without You" - with the picture jacket. A&M, IIRC, was one of the ones who pressed vinyl copies for radio and plastic for the public. If you ever heard Q-burn on an RCA, Capitol or MCA pressing - they seemed to have the best vinyl - you knew that record had been played to
death! ...or else played with a crappy stylus set at 5 grams...
JimMcGrath said:
I miss getting the messages from Satan when I spun the record backwards. CDs put a damper on his communications from Hell.
One night I sat in the OK-100/Cortland-Ithaca studio...about 3AM, playing an OK Fourplay..."Four in a row with no talk and no commercials!"...trying my durndest to find the supposed satanic message in "Stairway To Heaven". Spinning that Technics SL-1200 MK2 backwards with my finger until the strobe told me I was at something resembling 33 1/3 RPM in reverse...never could find it.
I later learned the message was apparently taken out of newer pressings of the album.
Of course today it's so easy...just pull it into the timeline on my Vegas Pro 8 and hit "reverse".
Debaser said:
Here are a couple of things I've noticed that you don't hear at radio stations that I've been in over the past 15 years or so...
---the sound of people having a good time
---employees listening to the station on radios at their desks.
DB, it's well established that I'm insane...but I still enjoy the business.
True, I'm not there every day and not having to deal with all the internal politics makes it a much more enjoyable experience. But I'm fortunate to be in a place with no liner cards, and where an hour of prep before your show is expected - even on weekends.
I do miss working with a staff of people from whom I can pick up little things to make my show better (there are a couple but that's all)...but thankfully when I need inspiration there's plenty of airchecks online from people who were (and I imagine still are, given the opportunity) masters of emotional connection.
As far as listening to the station at your desk...I don't think I ever did that, except for when I was a PD and had to do it. Nowadays people in multi-station clusters (such as mine) just have the hall monitors playing everywhere in the building. But what really threw me was last week when I filled in for the production director - first time in eons...and I walked into Traffic Goddess land to get some prod orders. There where the radio had sat for years - was now an iPod docking station.
Sometimes reality just reached out and B-slaps ya...