Bill Brent
300 Club - QQ All-Star
- Joined
- Apr 13, 2004
- Messages
- 354
Thanks one again to our friends Down Under at Involve Audio, we are able to present another in our series of complete original concert broadcasts from the 1970's. These were provided to subscribed stations on LP and tape, already encoded for the 70's version of surround sound, and the bigger stations that had their own encoding equipment, or were able to broadcast discrete quadraphonic sound got 4 track/channel tapes.
What we're doing this week is giving you an idea of what these shows would have sounded like with 21st century technology. The Involve audio encoder was used to make this dream come true (if only this outfit had been around back then).
The nice thing about this encoding system is that it sounds great in stereo, decodes quite nicely with the Dolby PLII setting on most modern home theater systems, and in the older QS/RM systems. But if you have one of their SurroundMaster decoders - you're sitting on the edge of the stage at the Rainbow Theater in 1977!
So Join us Tuesday Night - 10 pm (NYC time) - for the UK's answer to the King Biscuit Flour Hour; The British Biscuit (same production company on both sides of the "pond" - btw; nobody calls the Atlantic ocean "The Pond").
http://radiomaxmusic.com/popup.html
What we're doing this week is giving you an idea of what these shows would have sounded like with 21st century technology. The Involve audio encoder was used to make this dream come true (if only this outfit had been around back then).
The nice thing about this encoding system is that it sounds great in stereo, decodes quite nicely with the Dolby PLII setting on most modern home theater systems, and in the older QS/RM systems. But if you have one of their SurroundMaster decoders - you're sitting on the edge of the stage at the Rainbow Theater in 1977!
So Join us Tuesday Night - 10 pm (NYC time) - for the UK's answer to the King Biscuit Flour Hour; The British Biscuit (same production company on both sides of the "pond" - btw; nobody calls the Atlantic ocean "The Pond").
http://radiomaxmusic.com/popup.html