I decided to split the topic from the original post -- http://forum.talkingmachine.info/viewto ... =2&t=27623Marco Gilardetti wrote:Should you have the time and the means of scanning the point by point call-and-response between Mackenzie and Wilson, I'd be very glad to read the respective arguments. By the way, that would also be the opportunity to propose the discussion in a specific thread.![]()
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As for "From Tin Foil to Stereo" being Edison-oriented, no offense intended to anyone but the United States of America as a whole entity are unbelievably Edison-oriented when seen from afar. I remember expressing my astonishment about this to fellow physicists many years ago, and in reply they explained to me that Edison is (or was) teached in primary school, in a main history chapter, as a sort of national hero, which more or less accounts for the over-reactions of the average American when he perceives that Edison is being criticised by a foreigner.
Unfortunately, I don't have a scanner, or even a quality digital camera at this time. The nearest copy shop to me has a "bug up" about scanning books, because of potential copyright violations. A shortened, slightly revised version of the book "From Tinfoil to Stereo: The Acoustic Years of the Recording Industry, 1877-1929" was published several years ago -- https://www.amazon.com/Tinfoil-Stereo-A ... 0813013178 -- so the original source material MAY still be copyrighted.
In any event, the section of the book I quoted from goes into incredible detail, analyzing recording and reproduction methods and building to a central point, so dozens of pages would be involved.
As for the book's Edison bias, that was, to a certain extent, a rebuttal to an earlier book -- "The Fabulous Phonograph" by Roland Gelatt -- which had appeared about five years earlier and was critical of Thomas Edison, especially his management of the phonograph. Welch and Read, though they do not name the book specifically, refer to it as a "fictitious history of the phonograph published a few years ago." I think "From Tin Foil to Stereo" was the authors' attempt to "set the record straight.
The actual Edison bias in "From Tin Foil to Stereo" has more to do with recording technology and innovations brought about by Edison's company, especially the Edison Diamond Disc Phonograph, in comparison to other methods -- for instance, the Diamond Disc Phonograph's use of a precision ground diamond stylus; an airtight tone chamber; a feed screw to propel the tonearm across the record, etc. (Most importantly, the authors build a case that Edison's vertical (hill and dale) recording method was vastly superior to the lateral recording method used by almost all other companies.)
The authors also argue that Edison's "dead" recording studio method was superior, since it did not impose the acoustical qualities of one room (the recording studio) onto another (the listening room). In one very interesting chapter, the authors compare the Diamond Disc Phonograph with the Orthophonic Victrola, examining the function and technology of each component. The Diamond Disc phonograph is the winner, in their view.
The book is quite an interesting read--although it runs 550 pages (in small type, double columns) including the index. I highly recommend you try to hunt down a copy--either the 1959 or 1976 edition.
OF