[Table of Contents]


[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: [ARSCLIST] off-topic: guilty pleasure in hi-fi demo records



Hi-fi demo records got the benefit of a double-dip. Around 1954, the hi-fi fad among consumers was reaching a fever pitch. There were magazines dedicated to hobby of building up a good-sounding system, building large speakers (which are ideal in a monophonic system so the sound seems to come from a whole section of the room), record reviews, etc. By then, for the major record companies, recording sessions to tape was ubiquitous, high-quality European condenser mics had been discovered, there were outstanding recording studios and venues and the craft of recording excellent quality sound for long-playing records was well-honed. So around that time, but some earlier, the first crop of "show off yer new hifi system" records came out. RCA and I think Capitol took the approach seen on "An Adventure In High Fidelity", which is combine specially orchestrated music with various tones and a technical explaination. This format still lives today in examples like Stereophile's series of "sampler CD's." Another approach, taken by Mercury in the early days, was to produce benchmark examples of music recordings, which the critics and hi-fi showrooms would then latch onto as demonstration examples of what a good system could reproduce. The monophonic Dorati "1812 Overture" record was one such example, selling over 100,000 copies in its day.

Then, fast-forward to 1958, and along comes the stereo LP. An opening for a whole new crop of "show off yer newfangled stereo system" records. These came hard and fast from all directions. Probably the best-selling early example, again focused on music rather than tones and technical text, was Enoch Light's "Persuasive Percussion" (1959), which sold over 400,000 copies by 1962 (source: NY Times article from that time). The Mercury stereo "1812 Overture" was one of the earliest RIAA certified Gold records (over 500,000 sales) -- and the reissue CD went on to sell more than 500,000 worldwide also.

When CD's came out, there came a whole new market for "show off yer newfangled digital system" recordings. Then, in more recent times, there's been more of a race to the bottom on sound quality with most genres and "artists." The lossy-compression iPod and net-streaming world has hastened the trend.

-- Tom Fine

----- Original Message ----- From: "rodbrown" <rodbrown@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, July 16, 2007 4:16 AM
Subject: [ARSCLIST] off-topic: guilty pleasure in hi-fi demo records



Hi all,

I'm timidly un-lurking for a moment because I have a question for which I'm sure the ARSClist subscribership would have a broad range of useful, informed opinions.

I've recently become reacquainted with an LP I really enjoyed as a kid: "An Adventure In High Fidelity", subtitled "A 'New Orthophonic' High Fidelity Recording." This is an RCA Victor boxed set, LM-1802. I find I still enjoy hearing this old record.

It purports to present great-sounding (monaural) classical and semi-classical music, but also offers some very entertaining pop instrumentals. It's an interesting listen, full of ear-catching, exotic sounds, highs and lows, softs and louds. It tries to be all things to a broad range of listeners, and doesn't fail too badly, seems to me.

I'm sure there must be any number of similar efforts committed to vinyl by various companies who sought to interest the public in a particular label, or a brand of equipment, or a supposed technical breakthrough. Was this record a better-than-average example of a genre? Would any of you care to mention any fond recollections on this type of recording? Any recommendations?

(I'm presently a little less interested in LPs full of pink noise or selected sine waves [the more technically-oriented 'test' records] though those can be intriguing too.)

I'd be pleased to hear from you.

Thanks,
Rod



[Subject index] [Index for current month] [Table of Contents]