gramophoneshane wrote:Viva-Tonal wrote:estott wrote:That was NICE!
Thanks! Bear in mind, the disc was much less checked and cracked 20 years ago compared with now.
Gee, I wish I could get that sort of sound quality from my disc. It sounds great!
I wonder how well the music would record onto a wax cylinder. It would be pretty neat to add a new intro to the music using your dads name etc.
Try it and see what happens! (I wonder how well an Edison would record the sound from a large speaker such as an Altec-Lansing A7-500!) That was the best sounding disc of what few recordings I have of him from the 1940s that were done on discs. In a test play of it yesterday my tonearm bounced up and down because of the buckling of the acetate--nowhere near as good as long ago.
The other 78 rpm discs I have of Dad were made in 1948 after he got his tenor sax, and are all dubs made by someone miking the small speaker on a tabletop record player and cutting disc after disc from what the mike picked up.
(The other 1940s recordings I have were all made on his Webster-Chicago model 80 wire recorder.)
Your disc sounds under-recorded in the first place; sounds like the level wasn't high enough and/or he wasn't close enough to the mike.