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I supose Marigold can spin records on her horn.Maybe she can use that magic text channel to upload tunes.From my experience, concerts where the best place to relate to music, especially small informal ones.
The coolest record store I remember was Toad Tape in Oden, Utah. “Where Riverdale (Road) meets Washington (Boulevard) and just goes crazy.”Of course, Marigold is so old she remembers when wax cyllinders were “new-fangled”.
What the iTune generation is missing is being able to SELL your records when you were broke, or just tired of a particular album. Kind of hard to sell a download.
/Sometimes/ there were multiple grooves per side. Monty Python made one, just because they were Monty Python, and my parents had a “horse race” LP (with an auto race on the other side) that had six different grooves with six different endings, so you could bet on it. (The announcer on both sides was Henny Youngman.)
And then there were the Cook Binaural records, that had an outer half and an inner half, to be used with a T-shaped arm that played both halves at once. It lost out to the stereo system that put both left and right in a single groove that moved in two dimensions, since the stereo system played twice as long as Cook Binaural did.
I’m old enough to remember the tail end of 78, and I’ve owned plenty of 45s and 33 1/3s. (I’ve even been exposed to 16 2/3; I had a blind teacher.) I remember wire, reel-to-reel, RCA’s failed 1/4-inch cassette, the Phillps 1/8-inch cassette (including the CrO2 and Metal variants), 8-track, and 4-track. I had a Palm that was audio-capable, and I’m on my third iPhone. I have an iPad, too, and my sound system can also take an SD card.
Here’s something for you. For a few years, the CD-ROM drives of personal computers included an audio mode and a separate headphone jack just for playing CDs, instead of going through the computer’s audio system as is done today.
The Eclexian Premium Member over 12 years ago
Oh, fine. Make ME feel doddering… ;-)
ong236 over 12 years ago
Wow!!! Long time since I’ve heard that! Techincally though, we CAN still call these things records.
Linda Solomon over 12 years ago
its ok marigold…i find myself saying that more and more often these days….heavy sigh….
Anonymouse2.0 over 12 years ago
GASP I never knew the mythical record store actually existed, guess its common for a unicorn to know such things.
Q4horse over 12 years ago
I supose Marigold can spin records on her horn.Maybe she can use that magic text channel to upload tunes.From my experience, concerts where the best place to relate to music, especially small informal ones.
UsernameUsername1234 over 12 years ago
I miss record stores. Although they didn’t have many records for sale when I was buying—cassette tapes were where it was at…
StrangerCoug over 12 years ago
I suppose Marigold is like Llewellyn?
Comic Minister Premium Member over 12 years ago
I guess Phoebe doesn’t know what Record Store is.
artybee over 12 years ago
Waterloo in Austin is still considered a record store, I believe.
BRI-NO-MITE!! Premium Member over 12 years ago
The coolest record store I remember was Toad Tape in Oden, Utah. “Where Riverdale (Road) meets Washington (Boulevard) and just goes crazy.”Of course, Marigold is so old she remembers when wax cyllinders were “new-fangled”.
Weapon Brown over 12 years ago
Two words, Phoebe… “Miles Davis”.
kcredden over 12 years ago
Ha! I’ve had those senior blank-stares too, and I’m only 45 :)
DDrazen over 12 years ago
Me too, Mari-G. Me too.
Coyoty Premium Member over 12 years ago
Marigold isn’t a big sister. She’s Grandma.
ceceoh over 12 years ago
What the iTune generation is missing is being able to SELL your records when you were broke, or just tired of a particular album. Kind of hard to sell a download.
John W Kennedy Premium Member over 12 years ago
/Sometimes/ there were multiple grooves per side. Monty Python made one, just because they were Monty Python, and my parents had a “horse race” LP (with an auto race on the other side) that had six different grooves with six different endings, so you could bet on it. (The announcer on both sides was Henny Youngman.)
And then there were the Cook Binaural records, that had an outer half and an inner half, to be used with a T-shaped arm that played both halves at once. It lost out to the stereo system that put both left and right in a single groove that moved in two dimensions, since the stereo system played twice as long as Cook Binaural did.
John W Kennedy Premium Member over 12 years ago
Just call quadrophonic “Dolby 4.0”. ;-)
I’m old enough to remember the tail end of 78, and I’ve owned plenty of 45s and 33 1/3s. (I’ve even been exposed to 16 2/3; I had a blind teacher.) I remember wire, reel-to-reel, RCA’s failed 1/4-inch cassette, the Phillps 1/8-inch cassette (including the CrO2 and Metal variants), 8-track, and 4-track. I had a Palm that was audio-capable, and I’m on my third iPhone. I have an iPad, too, and my sound system can also take an SD card.
Here’s something for you. For a few years, the CD-ROM drives of personal computers included an audio mode and a separate headphone jack just for playing CDs, instead of going through the computer’s audio system as is done today.
cyberskull over 10 years ago
I think she knows very well what a record is.