by derbingle »
Sat Feb 02, 2008 10:38 pm
I have always been curious about the differing sound quality of Victor 78s from the start of the Orthophonic era. From 1925 to about 1931, they have a great high frequency response. After that time, they retain this quality, but now have the added resonance of a natural echo (change in studios or mic placement?). Then sometime in '35-'36, at the start of the Great Band Era, they, at times, take on a much duller sound, with poor high frequency and no resonance. By 1937, it becomes more consistent, with examples being Tommy Dorsey's Marie and Song of India.
Sometime in mid-1938, they start to display great high frequency, such as on Benny Goodman's Sing, Sing, Sing (recorded in Hollywood) and T.D.'s Boogie Woogie, but there are still several dull sessions mixed in. All of a sudden in 1939, they break out into marvelous high-fidelity never heard before, such as Glenn Miller's In the Mood and several Artie Shaw recordings like Copenhagen. This continues through early 1940, but starts to fall back into the dull zone again, G.M.'s Tuxedo Jct. being an example. From then until up to the 1942 recording ban, they are inconsistent again, with a change in '42 almost like the 1932 resonance "echo" again. T.D.'s last pre-ban sessions display this.
The next surprise is during the ban with G.M.'s V-Disc of St. Louis Blues March, recorded at Victor in N.Y., which is almost like 1949 Hi-Fi!
When the ban ends in Nov. '44, we now have a duller high frequency again, which lasts until the tape era.
Can anyone shed light on my analysis?
Thanks!
Kevin