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Old October 16th 06, 01:47 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
SR SR is offline
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Default Quadraphonic

I am interested in learning more about Quadraphonic stereos and it's music.

Stereos usually had 2 speakers.

But if the stereo had four speakers or more, did that makes it Quadraphonic?

To know if the stereo was Quadraphonic, must the word Quadraphonic be
mention in the manual? -Describing it as a Quadraphonic Receiver?

And what about Quadraphonic music being broadcast from the radio? How
did that worked?

Does Joe Franklyn, Danny Styles, Symphony Sid or Phil Shapp plays any of
this?

Ah those beautiful stereos with silver faces, needle light and silky
turner. Those were the days!


QTH New York City
73, SR!
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Old October 16th 06, 01:56 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default Quadraphonic

On Sun, 15 Oct 2006 20:47:00 -0400, SR wrote:

I am interested in learning more about Quadraphonic stereos and it's music.

Stereos usually had 2 speakers.

But if the stereo had four speakers or more, did that makes it Quadraphonic?

To know if the stereo was Quadraphonic, must the word Quadraphonic be
mention in the manual? -Describing it as a Quadraphonic Receiver?

And what about Quadraphonic music being broadcast from the radio? How
did that worked?

Does Joe Franklyn, Danny Styles, Symphony Sid or Phil Shapp plays any of
this?

Ah those beautiful stereos with silver faces, needle light and silky
turner. Those were the days!


QTH New York City
73, SR!


I seem to recall quadraphonic LPs came and went in a year or two in
the Seventies. No one could figure out what to put in the rear
speakers. It didn't make sense to be sitting in the middle of a band,
sound-wise.

bob
k5qwg
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Old October 16th 06, 02:47 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default Quadraphonic

On Mon, 16 Oct 2006 00:56:49 GMT, Bob Miller
wrote:

On Sun, 15 Oct 2006 20:47:00 -0400, SR wrote:

I am interested in learning more about Quadraphonic stereos and it's music.

Stereos usually had 2 speakers.

But if the stereo had four speakers or more, did that makes it Quadraphonic?

To know if the stereo was Quadraphonic, must the word Quadraphonic be
mention in the manual? -Describing it as a Quadraphonic Receiver?

And what about Quadraphonic music being broadcast from the radio? How
did that worked?

Does Joe Franklyn, Danny Styles, Symphony Sid or Phil Shapp plays any of
this?

Ah those beautiful stereos with silver faces, needle light and silky
turner. Those were the days!


QTH New York City
73, SR!


I seem to recall quadraphonic LPs came and went in a year or two in
the Seventies. No one could figure out what to put in the rear
speakers. It didn't make sense to be sitting in the middle of a band,
sound-wise.

bob
k5qwg


SQ worked on the radio.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quadrophonic
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Old October 16th 06, 02:53 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default Quadraphonic


SR wrote:
I am interested in learning more about Quadraphonic stereos and it's music.


There is a Wikipedia site that discusses the several techniques by
which the four channels of information could be stored on LPs.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quadraphonic

BTW, I refer to equipment that reproduces four channels of information
as four-channel equipment, not as Quadrophonic or Quad. There is a
company in England, the Acoustical Manufacturing Company, that sells
equipment with the trade name Quad, most notably electrostatic
loudspeakers.

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Old October 16th 06, 07:22 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
SR SR is offline
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Default Quadraphonic

Gee, a trade name like that could misled one!



Beloved Leader wrote:
SR wrote:

I am interested in learning more about Quadraphonic stereos and it's music.



There is a Wikipedia site that discusses the several techniques by
which the four channels of information could be stored on LPs.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quadraphonic

BTW, I refer to equipment that reproduces four channels of information
as four-channel equipment, not as Quadrophonic or Quad. There is a
company in England, the Acoustical Manufacturing Company, that sells
equipment with the trade name Quad, most notably electrostatic
loudspeakers.



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Old October 16th 06, 07:37 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default Quadraphonic

In article , SR
wrote:

I am interested in learning more about Quadraphonic stereos and it's music.

Stereos usually had 2 speakers.

But if the stereo had four speakers or more, did that makes it Quadraphonic?

To know if the stereo was Quadraphonic, must the word Quadraphonic be
mention in the manual? -Describing it as a Quadraphonic Receiver?

this one is said to be quad:
for sale ...

Realistic receiver http://www.kapaza.be/detail/3528863/
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Old October 16th 06, 08:19 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
SR SR is offline
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Default Quadraphonic

David: I have a modern Casio Keyboard that can play many different pipe
organ sounds.

The Casio Keyboard has build in reflex speakers. Knowing how real pipe
organs works, I was amazed on all of the different parts those speakers
were able to produce at the same time. With depth and separation.

It's almost like a 3D audio experience. -If you will!

We had this crude technology for a very long time. Considering the
history of the organ pipes. The human ear had always been conscience of
the direction of sound.

But unfortunately, I think that many recording studio were either very
expensive to record or not equipped with this type of equipment when
Quadraphonic came out.

Most of pop/rock/rock&roll is usually a piece of music that is usually
less then 4 min long and most of the instruments are playing at the same
time. So a Quadraphonic recording of that might not have much of an effect.

Whereas, with Jazz or Classical music, the pieces are much longer. The
different musical instruments will have individual parts to play and the
many different combinations. Music of these types would be far better
for Quadraphonic recording.

I guess if Quadraphonic technology came out 50 years earlier, it might
of caught on better during the swing/bebop era.

Funny that 3D photography is about 100 year old if not more!

73----73----73---- 73----

Steven





David wrote:

On Mon, 16 Oct 2006 00:56:49 GMT, Bob Miller
wrote:


On Sun, 15 Oct 2006 20:47:00 -0400, SR wrote:


I am interested in learning more about Quadraphonic stereos and it's music.

Stereos usually had 2 speakers.

But if the stereo had four speakers or more, did that makes it Quadraphonic?

To know if the stereo was Quadraphonic, must the word Quadraphonic be
mention in the manual? -Describing it as a Quadraphonic Receiver?

And what about Quadraphonic music being broadcast from the radio? How
did that worked?

Does Joe Franklyn, Danny Styles, Symphony Sid or Phil Shapp plays any of
this?

Ah those beautiful stereos with silver faces, needle light and silky
turner. Those were the days!


QTH New York City
73, SR!


I seem to recall quadraphonic LPs came and went in a year or two in
the Seventies. No one could figure out what to put in the rear
speakers. It didn't make sense to be sitting in the middle of a band,
sound-wise.

bob
k5qwg



SQ worked on the radio.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quadrophonic

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Old October 16th 06, 08:45 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default Quadraphonic

Bob Miller wrote:

On Sun, 15 Oct 2006 20:47:00 -0400, SR wrote:

I am interested in learning more about Quadraphonic stereos and it's music.

Stereos usually had 2 speakers.

But if the stereo had four speakers or more, did that makes it Quadraphonic?

To know if the stereo was Quadraphonic, must the word Quadraphonic be
mention in the manual? -Describing it as a Quadraphonic Receiver?

And what about Quadraphonic music being broadcast from the radio? How
did that worked?

Does Joe Franklyn, Danny Styles, Symphony Sid or Phil Shapp plays any of
this?

Ah those beautiful stereos with silver faces, needle light and silky
turner. Those were the days!


QTH New York City
73, SR!


I seem to recall quadraphonic LPs came and went in a year or two in
the Seventies. No one could figure out what to put in the rear
speakers. It didn't make sense to be sitting in the middle of a band,
sound-wise.

bob
k5qwg


Quad LPs (CD-4) were around for a while, but the front/back
information was encoded as an ultrasonic subcarrier, and a special
needle was needed. IIRC, a regular needle would destroy a CD-4 disc.

As for the encoding techniques, there was SQ, QS, logic-enhanced
variants... a childhood friend's parents had a full quad receiver with
all the various settings to cope with the formats. WCLV, Cleveland,
broadcast in quad for a while, and, I think, in Dolby-FM.

Some of the higher end audio shops in Cleveland ran quad ads on WCLV:
"Now I'm in front of you. Now I'm behind you. To your left, and to
your right. If you are listening on a regular stereo, you heard left,
right, left, right. We at Audio Craft can show you how quadraphonic
stereo can enhance your listening experience..."

--
Eric F. Richards,
"It’s easy to fall into the trap of thinking that the purpose of a
business is to make money. But the real purpose of a business is to
create value. While it’s possible to make money in the short run
without creating much value, in the long run it’s unsustainable.
Even criminal organizations have to create value for someone."
- Steve Pavlina, April 10, 2006
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Old October 16th 06, 05:56 PM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default Quadraphonic

Eric F. Richards wrote:
Bob Miller wrote:

On Sun, 15 Oct 2006 20:47:00 -0400, SR wrote:

I am interested in learning more about Quadraphonic stereos and
it's music.

I seem to recall quadraphonic LPs came and went in a year or two in
the Seventies. No one could figure out what to put in the rear
speakers. It didn't make sense to be sitting in the middle of a band,
sound-wise.



Mike Oldfield's "Boxed" was produced in quad.. It sounded fine on my
stereo but i was itching to try it out on a proper quad system! Did i miss
much?

Les

--
Remove Frontal Lobes to reply direct.


By all means let's be open-minded, but not so open-minded that our
brains drop out. (Richard Dawkins)

http://armsofmorpheus.blogspot.com/

http://www.richarddawkins.net/index.php


Les Hemmings a.a #2251 SA



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Old October 16th 06, 06:43 PM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default Quadraphonic


SR wrote:


Does Joe Franklyn, Danny Styles, Symphony Sid or Phil Shapp plays any of
this?


AM is mono and FM is stereo - there's no quadrophonic....so you
wouldn't notice if they ever played this stuff.

Joe Franklin retired from WOR some time last year, I believe.

Danny Stiles spins records on a few pay-for-play local AM stations here
in New York.

AM is mono, so you wouldn't notice if whatever he plays is in stereo
or not. Let's see....WNYC-AM 82 and various slots on WPAT-AM 93.

Once I even heard Stiles on WRCA-AM 1330 in Waltham/Boston, Mass.

I swear he's gotta be what...about a hundred or so now? He used to be
good listening when I was a kid, but voices don't age well on the radio
and after a while, deejays should know when to pack it in and retire.

Phil Shapp... is that guy ever going to graduate from Columbia U.? That
dude's been on college station WKCR-FM since I was a 15 year
old...possibly even longer (I'm 30 now). I wonder if they pay him - so
much for student-run radio. I remember during certain shows, the
stereo generator would be turned off.

WKCR has always been an interesting one - I remember a guy they had who
would spin opera records...and he had some weird speech defect...I
think he was hard of hearing or something. Wonder what happened to
him.

Symphony Sid.....his name sounds familiar...but I don't think I've ever
heard him. Ahh well.

Stephanie Weil
New York CIty, NY

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