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1.Electrical Analog Recording (1925) 2.Wire Recording (1940s) 3.Tape Recording (1950s) 4.Disk Speeds (45 v. 33 1/3) 5.High Fidelity 6.Stereo Recording (1950s) 7.Multitrack Recording (Sound-on- Sound, Sound-with-Sound) 8.Tape cassette 9.Noise reduction (Dolby, dbx) 10.Portable playback (Walkman)

Electrical Recording

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Electrical Recording. Electrical Analog Recording (1925) Wire Recording (1940s) Tape Recording (1950s) Disk Speeds (45 v. 33 1/3) High Fidelity Stereo Recording (1950s) Multitrack Recording (Sound-on-Sound, Sound-with-Sound) Tape cassette Noise reduction (Dolby, dbx) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Electrical Recording

1. Electrical Analog Recording (1925)

2. Wire Recording (1940s)

3. Tape Recording (1950s)

4. Disk Speeds (45 v. 33 1/3)

5. High Fidelity

6. Stereo Recording (1950s)

7. Multitrack Recording (Sound-on-Sound, Sound-with-Sound)

8. Tape cassette

9. Noise reduction (Dolby, dbx)

10.Portable playback (Walkman)

Page 2: Electrical Recording

•The Talkies and the Music Recording Industry: The role of AT&T, RCA and Western

Electric

Page 3: Electrical Recording
Page 4: Electrical Recording

•The Talkies and the Music Recording Industry: The role of AT&T, RCA and Western

Electric

•The Crooners: Popular Music and Culture

Page 5: Electrical Recording
Page 6: Electrical Recording

•The Telephone, The Talkies and the Music Recording Industry: The role of AT&T, RCA, and Western Electric

•The Crooners: Popular Music and Culture

•Jazz as the American Music: Big Bands and Swing

•Record Stores and Radio Stations: The Promotion and Selling of Popular Music Recordings

•Recorded Music on the Margins: Hillbilly, Race, and Ethnic Music

•Rock ‘n’ Roll and the Birth of the Teenager