The other day I transferred some material that had originated on 78s. Notably, two specific things:
1. a Clarence Williams jazz record with Louis Armstrong and Sidney Bechet - originally recorded in 1924 and released on a compilation lp in the early 1970s.
2. a Dave Appolon Gypsy mandolin piece recorded originally in the late 1930s and released on lp in the late 1970s.
These were both recorded in the same file. I simply placed the record on pause and changed the lp. I looked at the transfer in the spectrogram and teh Clarence Williams piece's highest frequency is around 8-9kHz, which I think is consistent with the calculations Craig made below.
The Dave Appolon piece is way higher - 18-20 kHz, and I'm pretty certain this is real music (not artifacts) - there aren't any clicks at the point where these high points are reached, but he is hitting some very high notes here. I read the liner notes for the album and David Grisman was involved in the transfer to lp, saying that Dave Appolon's widow provided the master records for the transfer. These high notes are not at the beginning of the record, they're scatterred throughout, which means they shouldn't be that high, right?
I was just wondering it that meant that engineers had found some way around the frequency limitation problems by the late 30s.
The notes also mention that Dave A. had a trick for reaching the high notes on his mandolin - by removing the 26th fret, he could play the 27th. My mandolin doesn't even go that high, so I know he is hitting some very high notes when he's playing.
Dan
1. a Clarence Williams jazz record with Louis Armstrong and Sidney Bechet - originally recorded in 1924 and released on a compilation lp in the early 1970s.
2. a Dave Appolon Gypsy mandolin piece recorded originally in the late 1930s and released on lp in the late 1970s.
These were both recorded in the same file. I simply placed the record on pause and changed the lp. I looked at the transfer in the spectrogram and teh Clarence Williams piece's highest frequency is around 8-9kHz, which I think is consistent with the calculations Craig made below.
The Dave Appolon piece is way higher - 18-20 kHz, and I'm pretty certain this is real music (not artifacts) - there aren't any clicks at the point where these high points are reached, but he is hitting some very high notes here. I read the liner notes for the album and David Grisman was involved in the transfer to lp, saying that Dave Appolon's widow provided the master records for the transfer. These high notes are not at the beginning of the record, they're scatterred throughout, which means they shouldn't be that high, right?
I was just wondering it that meant that engineers had found some way around the frequency limitation problems by the late 30s.
The notes also mention that Dave A. had a trick for reaching the high notes on his mandolin - by removing the 26th fret, he could play the 27th. My mandolin doesn't even go that high, so I know he is hitting some very high notes when he's playing.
Dan
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