[Table of Contents]


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

Re: [ARSCLIST] Robert Johnson RPM debate



James -
I've read the arguments and heard the pitch shifted samples and say it's possible the recordings are pitched high. This would mean one of three things: 1) Robert really sang that way; 2) the material was recorded too slow; and/or 3) the final pitch was modified by dubbing prior to manufacture.


I tend to go with #1, mostly because I've always heard him the way he has been presented on LPs and CDs and my ear is used to that. The samples are interesting food for thought, though!

#2 is possible mostly because machines do run slow (there's very little homogenity of 78rpm recording speeds company to company, and session to session within the same company. Add that to playback speed variations and, well...). What was the power source in Dallas? 110 VAC? 120 VAC? Or was it DC voltage? If AC, was the frequency (usually 60 Hz) solid, or did it wander? What kind of motor did the portable recording lathe use... AC, DC or counter-weighted (mechanical)? There are just too many variables here.

#3 requires forethought and since there was seemingly so little of it in #2, I doubt this scenario. Producers are not going to agonize about this kind of thing; to them Robert was just another blues picker. But who knew what he'd become 60 years later or that any of this would matter?

Good luck with your research!
Mal Rockwell

*******

james mendenhall wrote:
Hi, Arsclist
I am doing research about the rpm debate of the Robert Johnson recordings.
Does anyone have any information for me?
And, is this all speculation or has there been proof found that they are indeed too fast?


thanks

james




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