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Hi Mike:
There was at least one talking book format that certainly did - and still does exist. Brilliance Corp. from Michigan records program material in mono on all four tracks of a stereo cassette and sells a earphone adapter that switches from L to R -- but both L and R were recorded in the same direction so if you play it on a stereo cassette player you hear both tracks but in the same direction. To be more specific; first you listen to the L track then you flip the cassette and listen the L track going the opposite direction then flip the cassette again but also switch the adapter so you are listening to the R track in the original direction and then in the other direction. They also use a Lexicon "Compander" to time compress the audio about 10% ( I know, in audio terms a compander doesn't do time compression but it was the name of the rack mounted computer Lexicon sold for around $8,000). The result is you get the entire book, unedited on usually just one more cassette than the other publishers use to give you a 50% edited version. I designed the system for them back in the early 1980s and (after reneging on their contract with me) they started doing everything in-house in the late 1980s. They continue putting out around a dozen books a year. Great idea and really excellent narration/acting - just be careful getting into a business relationship with them ;-) Brian "Mike Rivers" wrote in message news:znr1080691077k@trad... In article writes: I seem to recall that early talking book recordings on cassette were sometimes prepared for a special cassette machine machines had reverse play and head switching to play a single coherent mono track continuously from track 1 through track 4. The thought had crossed my mind. Westinghouse made a cassette recorder that allowed all four tracks to be recorded on independently. However, Philips did not like such machines, as they destroyed the mono/stereo compatibility that had been consciously designed into the system. I thought about a special talking book format too, but I suspect that if it ever really existed, it was gone by the time cassette players became common in cars. TEAC had to get a special license from Philips to make the 4-track cassette PortaStudio because it didn't conform to the cassette track recording standard format. -- I'm really Mike Rivers ) However, until the spam goes away or Hell freezes over, lots of IP addresses are blocked from this system. If you e-mail me and it bounces, use your secret decoder ring and reach me he double-m-eleven-double-zero at yahoo |
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