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Re: [ARSCLIST] Cassette project
Hi Frank,
I'd be more than happy to work on this. Call me or e-mail me at 718-807-6261
or cosentinia@xxxxxxxxxx
Sounds like a fun project. I'm hear for ya.
Adrian
----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Strauss" <fbsdmd@xxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, April 19, 2009 3:52 PM
Subject: [ARSCLIST] Cassette project
Hello all-I attended a workshop this weekend at which someone played a
cassette on a boom box that that they had made in the early 1980's. The
cassette was a copy of the original, and sounded decent. The contents of
the
cassette include about 45 minutes of an informal conversation (along with
some drumming examples done on a practice pad), with a man who changed the
world of Celtic style drumming, named Alec Duthart. A few years after
this
session Alec was marching in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, had a
massive heart attack and died. The information on the cassette is quite
stunning for those of us interested in Celtic drumming, and begs to be
preserved. I suggested to the man who made the recording that he guard
the
original with his life and don't play it or the dub again. Is there
someone
on this list who practices their craft in the great northeast (NY-New
England) who would tackle the job of preserving the information on this
cassette? The man who made the cassette is now worried about delivering
the
cassette, and wishes to try to do it by hand. The question was also
raised
of ownership of the cassette contents. The man who made the recording
also
owns the cassette. The recording was informal. I suggested that the man
who made the recording owns the rights to it, and should copyright it. Am
I
giving him good advice? Ping me off list, if you wish. Thanks.
--
Frank B Strauss, DMD