Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Learning to live with recording
- A short take in praise of long takes
- 1 Performing for (and against) the microphone
- Producing a credible vocal
- ‘It could have happened’: The evolution of music construction
- 2 Recording practices and the role of the producer
- Still small voices
- Broadening horizons: ‘Performance’ in the studio
- 3 Getting sounds: The art of sound engineering
- Limitations and creativity in recording and performance
- Records and recordings in post-punk England, 1978–80
- 4 The politics of the recording studio: A case study from South Africa
- From Lanza to Lassus
- 5 From wind-up to iPod: Techno-cultures of listening
- A matter of circumstance: On experiencing recordings
- 6 Selling sounds: Recordings and the record business
- Revisiting concert life in the mid-century: The survival of acetate discs
- 7 The development of recording technologies
- Raiders of the lost archive
- The original cast recording of West Side Story
- 8 The recorded document: Interpretation and discography
- One man's approach to remastering
- Technology, the studio, music
- Reminder: A recording is not a performance
- 9 Methods for analysing recordings
- 10 Recordings and histories of performance style
- Recreating history: A clarinettist's retrospective
- 11 Going critical: Writing about recordings
- Something in the air
- Afterword: Recording: From reproduction to representation to remediation
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Discography
- Index
A matter of circumstance: On experiencing recordings
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Learning to live with recording
- A short take in praise of long takes
- 1 Performing for (and against) the microphone
- Producing a credible vocal
- ‘It could have happened’: The evolution of music construction
- 2 Recording practices and the role of the producer
- Still small voices
- Broadening horizons: ‘Performance’ in the studio
- 3 Getting sounds: The art of sound engineering
- Limitations and creativity in recording and performance
- Records and recordings in post-punk England, 1978–80
- 4 The politics of the recording studio: A case study from South Africa
- From Lanza to Lassus
- 5 From wind-up to iPod: Techno-cultures of listening
- A matter of circumstance: On experiencing recordings
- 6 Selling sounds: Recordings and the record business
- Revisiting concert life in the mid-century: The survival of acetate discs
- 7 The development of recording technologies
- Raiders of the lost archive
- The original cast recording of West Side Story
- 8 The recorded document: Interpretation and discography
- One man's approach to remastering
- Technology, the studio, music
- Reminder: A recording is not a performance
- 9 Methods for analysing recordings
- 10 Recordings and histories of performance style
- Recreating history: A clarinettist's retrospective
- 11 Going critical: Writing about recordings
- Something in the air
- Afterword: Recording: From reproduction to representation to remediation
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Discography
- Index
Summary
My first experience with the gramophone was a total failure. It must have been around 1960, when I was seven or eight years of age. My father had given me a second-hand radio set with an integrated record player, and I happily went to a second-hand dealer and bought one of those seven-inch discs for just a Mark – a single with Harry Belafonte singing his ‘Banana Boat Song’ of 1957. The battle of the speeds, which had been waged in a country unknown to me at the time, now reached me, and I became one of its casualties. I owned a record player and I owned a disc, but the two did not go together as my record player had only one speed – 78 rpm – for which no records were still made. Instead, the characteristic Belafonte sonority was transformed into a flickering castrato each time I put the disc onto the turntable. To an artist like Paul Hindemith, this might have been a stimulus for experimenting with sounds formerly unknown and unheard of. To me, it was a frustrating experience which led me to neglect the gramophone altogether for some years. Instead, I looked at the back of the radio case through the little ventilation holes to search for Heinzelmännchen (munchkins) making music inside the box.
Later, when I was thirteen or fourteen, I wanted to buy my first classical record. We still had no proper record player: in fact, the old one had been disposed of by then. But I was eager to get a recording of Schubert’s beautiful and haunting Piano Trio Op. 100, even before I had a record player to play it on. I had grown to love the Trio’s slow movement because it was practised by older pupils at my school during a week in a holiday camp devoted to music-making. But the local shop did not have a record in stock; the sales assistant looked it up in a catalogue – it must have been the Bielefelder – and informed me that there were two recordings for 25 DM and 21 DM respectively.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Recorded Music , pp. 116 - 119Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
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