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Re: Question of speed

Posted: Sat Nov 16, 2013 8:33 pm
by De Soto Frank
I haven't checked it for pitch, but i have a Victor blue "arch-label" issue of "Rhapsody in Blue", with George Gershwin and Paul Whiteman's band, which is on two sides, 12 inch. The fast passages are hysterically fast :shock: ... and I think there are some cuts too. Even if they slowed the lathe down, I still suspect they pushed tempi to get it to fit on a single disc.

I have a Columbia recording from about 20 years later, with Oscar Levant and Philadelphia/Ormandy that occupies three sides, 12 inch. The spare side of the second disc has Gershwin's Prelude #2 and #3, piano solo.

:coffee:

Re: Question of speed

Posted: Sat Nov 16, 2013 11:12 pm
by Wolfe
De Soto Frank wrote:I haven't checked it for pitch, but i have a Victor blue "arch-label" issue of "Rhapsody in Blue", with George Gershwin and Paul Whiteman's band, which is on two sides, 12 inch. The fast passages are hysterically fast :shock: ... and I think there are some cuts too. Even if they slowed the lathe down, I still suspect they pushed tempi to get it to fit on a single disc.
That version runs to 9 minutes, on two sides of a 12" record. Just about exactly the length of the electrical remake of a few years later, also on a 12" inch disc.

Some 12" discs will approach (or maybe even exceed) 5 minutes a side, but they are not common.

Re: Question of speed

Posted: Tue Nov 19, 2013 5:46 am
by CptBob
Orchorsol wrote:
CptBob wrote:That reminds me of that classic 1960s LP, "Pinky & Perky's Greatest Hits" and the sub-title said, can you tell these from the original sounds. For non-UK readers, Pinky & Perky were a pair of puppet pigs who had a children's television show. Their singing might have been the results of helium inflation.
My generation, but I never quite "got" Pinky and Perky! They are on 78 too... I have a copy (just to be obtuse, as I disliked them so much when growing up :roll: ).

The effect was achieved by speeding recordings up (i.e. recording the voices against the instrumental backing playing at half speed).
My generation too, they passed me by. We didn't have a telly when I was a kid. The copy of greatest hits was one of my ex-wife's childhood artifacts. I only mentioned them as an example of octave transposition. Oh dear, I'm getting defensive, having said that, if I saw one or two on 78 I'd probably buy them if they weren't expensive.

Re: Question of speed

Posted: Tue Nov 19, 2013 7:13 am
by Henry
Does anybody remember The Chipmunks? Same kind of technique with similar results.

Re: Question of speed

Posted: Tue Nov 19, 2013 12:59 pm
by Wolfe
Les Paul made a number of hit records using that technique as well. Starting with disc to disc dubs, like this one.

http://youtu.be/q6VHlqH4-xs

He began to overuse it though.