How did you first hear about Tape Op mag/TOMB?
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- ;ivlunsdystf
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How did you first hear about Tape Op mag/TOMB?
No sense doing a poll here (too many possibilities) - I'm just curious how people end up here - nowadays, a lot of the leads probably come from Google searches for specific items of gear which lead to threads here, but ...
I'll go first: I found a lone copy of Tape Op magazine in the free periodicals rack at a Music Go Round in St. Paul back in 1999 or so. I then got a free subscription and finally wandered over to the TOMB in 2003 or so. Prior to Tape Op I had been learning everything from Sweetwater catalogs, library books, etc.
Others?
I'll go first: I found a lone copy of Tape Op magazine in the free periodicals rack at a Music Go Round in St. Paul back in 1999 or so. I then got a free subscription and finally wandered over to the TOMB in 2003 or so. Prior to Tape Op I had been learning everything from Sweetwater catalogs, library books, etc.
Others?
Played a gig in Boston with a band whose drummer was the one and only Darron Burke, who was a very early member of the Tape Op family, and we got to talking about recording and he told me that I HAD to go to tapeop.com and subscribe. This was probably '98 or '99, and I've been obsessed with it ever since. I didn't really get into the message board as much until 2001 I think.
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Back in 2000 I took a six-month gig running sound for a cruise ship line that ran cruises from the Straits of Gibraltar to Cape Horn and back. Not a bad gig, wireless mics for 6 singer/actor/dancers in Mickey Mouse/Minnie Mouse/Donald Duck costumes and DAT playback in the afternoon, and a jug band in the evenings. An old Soundcraft 200B board that was similar to the one I'd used in college. You know, the blue and grey one with the red and yellow caps on the knobs. Lots of time off to eat shrimp and flirt with wealthy 55-year-old women. One day, just after leaving port at Punta Arenas, we were beset by pirates. 4 of the actors and I were taken prisoner along with many of the passengers. As fate would have it the pirates had previously captured another cruise ship, one which employed a former member of His Name Is Alive as cruise director. She happened to have a copy of TapeOp #9 (for the Warren Defever article) which I was able to read during our captivity.
Of course, we escaped, by rewiring Minnie and Goofy's wireless mics, which they were still wearing when captured, in order to signal the Chilean Coast Guard. There's more to the story, and it really is quite exciting and fascinating, but the TapeOp thing's really the important part.
Of course, we escaped, by rewiring Minnie and Goofy's wireless mics, which they were still wearing when captured, in order to signal the Chilean Coast Guard. There's more to the story, and it really is quite exciting and fascinating, but the TapeOp thing's really the important part.
"Jeweller, you've failed. Jeweller."
"Lots of people are nostalgic for analog. I suspect they're people who never had to work with it." ? Brian Eno
All the DWLB music is at http://dwlb.bandcamp.com/
"Lots of people are nostalgic for analog. I suspect they're people who never had to work with it." ? Brian Eno
All the DWLB music is at http://dwlb.bandcamp.com/
- kingnimrod
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i saw a copy in 98ish? in a music store in madison, and i think it was the issue with butch vig in it - and was so excited to see a "zine" about recording. i had pretty much given up on mix or any other publications and thought of it way more of a punk rock/indie rock underground thing than anything else - just like punk planet or whatever - it actually spoke to the scene i was into or felt part of. maybe 2001/2ish when i hit the early TOMB iterations? the early days of supagreg - numbah one, kompressor, soundguy, bluepixl and other such nonsense.
looks like that was actually issue 11, winter 98/99. been a subscriber since then.
looks like that was actually issue 11, winter 98/99. been a subscriber since then.
you had me going until the bit about the Chilean Coast Guard.dwlb wrote:Back in 2000 I took a six-month gig running sound for a cruise ship line that ran cruises from the Straits of Gibraltar to Cape Horn and back. Not a bad gig, wireless mics for 6 singer/actor/dancers in Mickey Mouse/Minnie Mouse/Donald Duck costumes and DAT playback in the afternoon, and a jug band in the evenings. An old Soundcraft 200B board that was similar to the one I'd used in college. You know, the blue and grey one with the red and yellow caps on the knobs. Lots of time off to eat shrimp and flirt with wealthy 55-year-old women. One day, just after leaving port at Punta Arenas, we were beset by pirates. 4 of the actors and I were taken prisoner along with many of the passengers. As fate would have it the pirates had previously captured another cruise ship, one which employed a former member of His Name Is Alive as cruise director. She happened to have a copy of TapeOp #9 (for the Warren Defever article) which I was able to read during our captivity.
Of course, we escaped, by rewiring Minnie and Goofy's wireless mics, which they were still wearing when captured, in order to signal the Chilean Coast Guard. There's more to the story, and it really is quite exciting and fascinating, but the TapeOp thing's really the important part.
?What need is there to weep over parts of life? The whole of it calls for tears.? -- Seneca
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In 2001 I was making a record in a studio called Electric Wilburland in Newfield, not far from Ithaca, NY. The first thing I noticed was a Mitch Easter interview. Will the owner told me the subscription was free, which fit my budget nicely. Not to be dramatic, or foolish, but it was a big factor in deciding to move to Portland. Then Larry goes and moves away! Ah well. This town is great.
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