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comment by kleinbl00
kleinbl00  ·  3881 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: Cassette Tapes Are Almost Cool Again

...sigh...

They're crap, though. They've always been crap.

CD - 96dB Dynamic range, frequency response 20hz - 20kHz

LP - 65dB dynamic range, frequency response 20hz - 20kHz

Cassette - 55dB dynamic range, frequency response 35-12kHz

You could get better out of them. I mean, shit. I owned a Nakamichi Dragon for a while. Finally dumped my Tascam a few years back. But cassettes are uber-poopy. They made sense for long car trips because there was literally no other choice.





ButterflyEffect  ·  3881 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Oh yes, I will never argue that cassettes are the way to go if you're looking for something that consistently sounds good. But when you're mostly broke college students who consume way too much music for anyone's health and have a desire to put out physical copies for cheap on top of digital distribution then cassettes start to look more desirable.

T-Dog  ·  3881 days ago  ·  link  ·  

well, i mean, CDs aren't that expensive to manufacture. Not to mention you'd probably sell more since no one will have to stop and wonder whether or not that have a CD player at home or in their car.

Like the article says, there's a certain romance to them that i appreciate. But if romance was all i cared about i'd just go straight to vinyl. I've always seen cassettes as the ugly cousin of the audio player family. But, then again, i'm sure that's precisely the appeal for a lot of people.

kleinbl00  ·  3881 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I feel you. But damn who the hell still has a player?

I mean, I still have an MZR-55, but that only because I've got some live recordings I made on that minidisc recorder and I haven't dumped 'em to pro tools yet. Anything on tape is available somewhere else better that's a lot more portable...

ButterflyEffect  ·  3881 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Not many people, and those that do overestimate how many people actually own one. It's a near-infuriating debate that I've had multiple times, with multiple people who believe too much in cassettes and cassette culture. Don't get me wrong, I enjoy them and the scenes that still use them but it's like talking to a wall when trying to convince people otherwise.

    Anything on tape is available somewhere else better that's a lot more portable...

This is mostly true. Some noise stuff is very hard to come by, as bfv points out. The same can be said for certain drone influenced music as well as some garage rock. Many bands and labels that primarily do local shows offer cassettes, so if you want something at a show at least you get a digital download card with it.

T-Dog they're not too expensive (unlike LPs) and I should have noted this earlier but in our case we allow the bands to decide which media they'd like to be released on (CD or Tape). As far as selling them, there hasn't been a noticeable difference between the CDs and Tapes we've put out. I'd imagine that this is because of the scale (run of 50-100) and the fact that each purchase comes with a digital download.