13 Reasons Why Cassettes Are Cool Again

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 13 янв 2018
  • Why would a cassette lie? Thirteen reasons why they're cool again in 2018, narrated using the same model of tape recorder as seen in the Netflix series "13 Reasons Why".
  • НаукаНаука

Комментарии • 3,3 тыс.

  • @JeremyHeiden
    @JeremyHeiden 6 лет назад +1026

    OMG, I just saw my album on this! lol, thats so bitchen! Thank you so much, I love this channel, I'm excited i can be a part of it!

    • @Gigidag77
      @Gigidag77 6 лет назад +14

      Cool, but who has a dolby-s decoding device these days ? =P

    • @JeremyHeiden
      @JeremyHeiden 6 лет назад +61

      Gigidag77 i agree it’s rare, but i used Dolby S to mimic the quality of digilog and to sound crystal clear. And with S being the highest level of noise reduction and fidelity, and it’s completely backwards compatible, Dolby B and C still sound good on a S encoded cassette as well as not using a noise reduction system. It’s just a touch of audiophile for those who have the equipment.

    • @EnochDark
      @EnochDark 6 лет назад +12

      I never liked S because it messed with my cymbals...

    • @bratina501
      @bratina501 6 лет назад +6

      I have one! A fully functional Sony TC-WR635S auto reverse and full logic deck from 1993. Also good for recording as it will automatically calibrate its self for almost any blank cassette out there. Throw a good quality cassette at it such as the Maxell UR-90s shown in this video and it will give results comparable to professional duplication houses.

    • @Arcturian1111
      @Arcturian1111 6 лет назад +11

      I record vinyl to cassettes, I just purchased an EQ for my home stereo. Its night and day when you record with an EQ. More bass and highs etc. My Walkman and my car cassette player dont lie. Try an EQ. Cool Vid. You can buy albums cheap on ebay.

  • @andreasklindt7144
    @andreasklindt7144 4 года назад +564

    14: RUclips can't stop you from recording the audio of music videos on cassette tapes!

    • @Blackadder75
      @Blackadder75 4 года назад +19

      RUclips can't stop you from just making mp3 files from any yt video. This reason is as stupid as the other 13

    • @europa2000man
      @europa2000man 4 года назад +34

      I do this all the time, record off RUclips, because 1. There is many songs I like that are available anymore or is hard to find, and 2. I do not have much money to buy LP records or tapes, so this is a cheaper alternative. I used to record live radio broadcasts, but due to radio going down a good bit, like television, there's less and less music I like being played. I like pre-1990's music, but the radio stations keep playing the same songs over and over again and none of the less well known songs. Also, I am not big into the more popular songs, I like rarer music, so RUclips is the best way. Even the music streaming services like the spotify one don't have many of the songs I like, so RUclips is the best service out there.

    • @dannyinoakpark9095
      @dannyinoakpark9095 4 года назад +13

      Since this pandemic started I got an old school boom box with Bluetooth and a bunch of bricks of blank tapes from Amazon
      I feel like a kid again making mixtapes
      And thanks to RUclips I can get all kinds of live performances from my favorite bands that we normally couldn't get as kids unless you ordered a rare CD out of a metal magazine or something

    • @leroypodunk8571
      @leroypodunk8571 3 года назад +2

      Dang straight

    • @soniablanche5672
      @soniablanche5672 3 года назад +5

      @lasest2 you can do with youtube-dl, you don't need any online converters.

  • @thenewbgamer6416
    @thenewbgamer6416 3 года назад +232

    15. You don't have to pay a monthly subscription to get "ad free" music.
    16. You can get albums cheap, and even free from garage sales, family, and the trash. Yes I've pulled cassettes out of the trash, and I enjoy them.

    • @estebanod
      @estebanod 2 года назад +9

      15. Since you're stealing music ig this wouldn't be a problem for you, you can use a cracked Spotify APK to have unlimited ad free music for free.
      16. You can have free music on your phone too, by just downloading it. And you can have wayyyy more music on a phone than on a cassette.

    • @microwavedcaprisun6521
      @microwavedcaprisun6521 2 года назад +2

      Yeah, im tired of paying for youtube music premium

    • @707josh
      @707josh 2 года назад +5

      @@microwavedcaprisun6521 if you’re really paying for RUclips premium music and not Apple Music, Spotify, etc. that’s a really sad horrible decision. RUclips music isn’t even good. I have premium myself and know this

    • @microwavedcaprisun6521
      @microwavedcaprisun6521 2 года назад +1

      @@707josh i dont pay for youtube music premium lol i only use RUclips music because it has a slightly wider selection of music

    • @theoblivious2001
      @theoblivious2001 2 года назад +2

      Those cassettes still sound fine, huh?

  • @ianwalker7367
    @ianwalker7367 6 лет назад +644

    Reason 14: Cassette tapes stay where you leave them. Stop listening, let it rattle around the car for a year or more, put it back in the same machine or in another machine and it continues from where you left off.

    • @PaxHominibusBonaeVoluntatis
      @PaxHominibusBonaeVoluntatis 5 лет назад +11

      you have 50% of chance to start where you stopped if you have auto-reverse on deck or in another machine, to be honest :)

    • @joesycamore2899
      @joesycamore2899 5 лет назад +4

      So does a CD and an MP3

    • @evetsnitram8866
      @evetsnitram8866 5 лет назад

      I've had a few jam up on me and wear in spots.

    • @SALTOWNPRODUCTIONS2
      @SALTOWNPRODUCTIONS2 5 лет назад

      Good point!

    • @JunieVM
      @JunieVM 5 лет назад

      The best reason why it's best at it's bestest 😂.

  • @dren84
    @dren84 2 года назад +99

    There is one total advantage of cassettes over other medias: they look great. And a sight of a well-equipped deck with tape running is something mesmerizing.

  • @grasssnake7190
    @grasssnake7190 2 года назад +147

    Whether it was Vinyl, Cds or Tapes, you just couldn't beat the unwrapping of them being brand new, you just don't get the same feeling with digital streaming media, you just can't buy that feeling, I'm so glad it's nearly all coming back, in this case, vintage is best!!👍👍

  • @vincentkruskal3884
    @vincentkruskal3884 6 лет назад +221

    And number 15: If you are listening to a book on tape and switch cars, or whatever, it REMEMBERS where you are. The only format with a built-in bookmark

    • @BilisNegra
      @BilisNegra 5 лет назад +4

      Spot on, that's the use case where that's actually an advantage to be found. Not with popular music.

    • @samnicholson5051
      @samnicholson5051 4 года назад +8

      I think thats why they remained a common format for audiobooks, for some time even after they stopped selling music cassettes. It was a major advantage that cd players and mp3 players could not do, if you were to bring the cd to another player, or switch the device off.

    • @europa2000man
      @europa2000man 4 года назад +3

      Same with video cassettes also (VHS, Betamax, Video 2000, etc). I hate the way that DVD's make you sit through a whole load of adverts and copyright warnings and public information films, etc, and then you have to wait for a long drawn out menu screen to pop up to press play and it's only then you get to see the film or programme series you wanted to watch. On streaming service on the internet, you also have to watch a whole load of adverts and then, if the internet is slow, the programme or film keeps buffering all the time, making you lose interest in the thing you wanted to watch. Finally, if you switch off the DVD or streaming service and you want to watch it at a certain point, you have to go through all the nonsense I mentioned all over again. With video tape, you push the cassette into the video recorder machine, press play (some VCR's will start up automatically) and away you go, and if there is adverts or copyright warning or anything at the start, you can just fast forward through all of it until you get to the film or programme you wanted to watch. Also, if you want to stop it and watch it another time, you can press stop and when you come back to it, its still at the point you were at the last time. Audio cassettes and video cassettes are much better than many people think!

    • @Jiji-the-cat5425
      @Jiji-the-cat5425 3 года назад +2

      True. Idk how popular books on tape still are. Most non RUclips audio books tend to be on CD. I think tape has a lot of advantages for them. You can stop and replay like that, move to different devices easier. Though CD's have the advantage of being able to skip chapters if you wanted to do that.

    • @enricosanchez894
      @enricosanchez894 3 года назад +1

      Right, I was listening to A Book by Desi Arnaz when my wood-paneled station wagon broke down. I simply ejected the tape, got into my Yaris and continued listening. (I was in my driveway at the time.)

  • @Zedek
    @Zedek 4 года назад +77

    1:45 - ".25 cents each" - That means 4 tapes for 1 Cent? 400 tapes for $1? NICE!!

    • @starlight4649
      @starlight4649 2 года назад +5

      I mean
      I went to a garage sale once where I got 3 storage cases that could hold 117 cassettes total for a whole 1.50
      50 cents for the whole case, and all three of them were half full of chrome tapes. I was actually amazed.

    • @thomasnguyen6144
      @thomasnguyen6144 5 месяцев назад +1

      No, he said $0.25 for a used cassette. So, 4 for $1. 400 for $100. That’s a lot of used cassettes for $100.

  • @elisasuperiordork6755
    @elisasuperiordork6755 5 лет назад +258

    Fun fact- I have made mixtapes for crushes (I'm 18, and only caught the tail end of cassette usage) and 99% of the time you hand someone a mixtape that you spent a good few hours recording and decorating, their face will light up and they'll be thrilled because nobody else has ever done something like that for them. Make sure you use a good deck, if you can, when you record it, so they'll have the best sounding mixtape you can muster!

    • @morten1
      @morten1 2 года назад +11

      so, did you catch some tail end? 😊

    • @hanglider
      @hanglider 9 месяцев назад

      Thats so cool!

  • @roguerunner7553
    @roguerunner7553 6 лет назад +120

    I used to sneak a cassette recorder into concerts in the 70s & still have all the tapes! Some came out pretty good!

  • @malcolmpalm
    @malcolmpalm 6 лет назад +203

    No pencil was needed in the making of this video

    • @EricICX
      @EricICX 6 лет назад +13

      Or BIC pen, I hope.

    • @X2FileWrightonite
      @X2FileWrightonite 6 лет назад +4

      R U so sure?

    • @QuadTubeChannel
      @QuadTubeChannel 6 лет назад +4

      lol they should have provided free one's with the C120 tapes I got a few years ago.They were fine until you got to a certain point in the tape, after which it was just too much for tape's motor. However if your tape machine could handle the load you could apparently fit an awful lot of ZX Spectrum games onto that tape ;) Good times.

    • @TheAdminjack
      @TheAdminjack 6 лет назад

      RUclips Reply of the Year!

    • @sethhorst6158
      @sethhorst6158 5 лет назад

      Well except for the script writing maybe.

  • @arashikumo7593
    @arashikumo7593 5 лет назад +48

    I was never around for the 60's or late 90's, when cassettes were originally popular.
    But being here for the revival, I'm happy to say I'm proud to have helped in the rising demand of new tapes.

    • @kentjensen4504
      @kentjensen4504 Год назад +1

      You’re cool.

    • @strafer8764
      @strafer8764 Год назад +2

      There weren’t cassettes in the 60s. A Track was in the 70s. Cassettes became a thing in the 80s

    • @fulsmith
      @fulsmith Год назад +1

      I disagree. I bought a Panasonic cassette device in late 60s. It had a single lever control, no pushbuttons. Recorded my own tapes.

    • @themetalhead1463
      @themetalhead1463 3 месяца назад

      Cassettes weren’t very popular in the late 90’s.

  • @toddlee2571
    @toddlee2571 5 лет назад +10

    I think the good thing about the cassette revival, along with the vinyl revival, is that kids who grew up on digital files or even CDs are now listening to albums in their entirety, something they didn't have to do with a digital source. This helps them discover a lot of music they overlooked when their listening habits were oriented towards singles, not to mention reintroducing the album as an artistic statement.

  • @rwj777
    @rwj777 6 лет назад +82

    I just love listening to music on a physical format period... cassettes, compact disks, mini disks, DAT, records, even the 8-track format. I love them all!

    • @thatguyontheright1
      @thatguyontheright1 6 лет назад

      Fix that failure

    • @wii1245
      @wii1245 6 лет назад +3

      Raymond Williams i love vinyl recorda, i thunk audio cassette will makeover comeback, even 8 track taoes.

    • @Jeffrey314159
      @Jeffrey314159 6 лет назад +1

      Digital storage media don't count!

    • @Luffym17
      @Luffym17 6 лет назад +1

      Well, physical copies whether digital or analog, they are still physical copies ether way so they count.

  • @fountaincap
    @fountaincap 6 лет назад +24

    I can vouch for #8 as last year I decided to record mixtapes of the music from my college years, with one side of each tape representing one year of college. There's a lot more heart put into it when you have to carefully select the songs to fit the limited amount of tape and put them in a certain order that has meaning to you. You could always make a playlist of mp3s, but it doesn't have the emotional attachment of something tangible that you took the time to make.

  • @NoChillMan
    @NoChillMan 6 лет назад +108

    Nothing beats listening to a brand new Synthwave album on cassette.

    • @Zedek
      @Zedek 4 года назад +4

      Why I don't think is true. Many Synthwave albums were actually embracing "the new technology" - the CD. So listening on a tape is true "retro", but actually, I am sure many of those have been inspired by digital technology (let alone their synthesizers). So listening it on a original 1985 stereo on "Compact Disc" is probably more Synthwave then on a cassette, because Synthwave was "the future", "spacy" and all "tech-y", and the future was surely not analogue tapes in a plastic case but shiny CDs without the need to rewind and read by a sexy, futuristic laser with crystal-clear, binary sound.
      (Yes, I now many awesome synths are analog)

    • @petflash4050
      @petflash4050 3 года назад +5

      @@Zedek 😐

    • @Aetila
      @Aetila 3 года назад

      Guardians of the Galaxy made the cassette popular again. lol

  • @danielt.8573
    @danielt.8573 6 лет назад +28

    Cassettes stopped being sold but they never stopped being cool. I do miss the days of walking inside a store and buy music & videogame cassettes. Decades later I still have all my hardware, audio and games. I'd keep buying new stuff if available today.

    • @3peopleinaroom50
      @3peopleinaroom50 5 лет назад +1

      What did you use game cassettes on?

    • @wolfetteplays8894
      @wolfetteplays8894 Год назад +2

      For real… I miss the old days when commerce felt real and tangible. Business is far too impersonal these days

    • @danielt.8573
      @danielt.8573 Год назад +1

      @@wolfetteplays8894 Remember electronic stores, especially in the 80s and 90s? They are guilty of their own demise for stop selling products people still wanted, going against those consumer bases. I still have an alarm clock, listen to music in vinyl, talk on CB radio, play retro games and make acrobatic stuff with RC cars.
      I'm 41 with a family and I still feel like a kid who never grew up, a kid nostalgic for those moments we visited electronics and toy stores.

  • @gregkarris6869
    @gregkarris6869 6 лет назад +78

    What? First vinyl, now cassettes? I hear VHS is next? I'm also hearing that CD's are making a comeback as well. Better get these physical copies before you are FORCED to deal with streaming and pay-per-play (like a jukebox) instead of owning...

    • @rossssd4969
      @rossssd4969 6 лет назад +2

      I thought CDs were well on the decline

    • @gregkarris6869
      @gregkarris6869 6 лет назад +8

      Just to clarify - found out that newer "remastered" CD's sound worse than original releases. Trying to get those CD versions and get rid of "remastered" ones I had gotten... wish I never got rid of those originals, which are getting harder and harder to find...

    • @NUCLEARARMAMENT
      @NUCLEARARMAMENT 6 лет назад +11

      Greg Karris Current magnetic tape technology features magnetic particles measuring several nanometers across (well under 10 nm), and magnetic recording head gaps that are in the low tens of nanometers, which is the maximum head gap size practical to read these nano particles. With these advancements, we can now achieve areal densities on tape in excess of 200 gigabits, that is 25 gigabytes, per square inch of magnetic tape surface.
      To give you an idea of how much data you could record onto the longest tape-length VHS videocassette ever made (the DF-480 [T-240 equivalent]) could store 4 hours of recorded video at SP mode and contained 1,614 feet (19,386 inches) tape length and, of course, utilized 0.5"-width tape that defined the VHS format itself; if you calculate that in square inches, you get 9,864 square inches of total tape surface area in that particular tape, which assuming 200 gigabits (25 gigabytes) per square inch, translates to 1936.8 terabits (242.1 terabytes) of data per tape.
      To add some further information and give you a better idea of how vast that amount of data storage is, let's assume you could record a maximum of 4 hours (240 minutes/14,400 seconds) of digital video and audio onto this tape, it would mean a maximum theoretical data rate of 134.5 gigabits (16.8125 gigabytes) per second. Compare this to the first, last, and only consumer-level, digital videotape standard, D-VHS, which using the same tape specifications as above but without modern technology, could store a meager 50 GB and supported a maximum bitrate of 28.8 megabits (3.6 megabytes) per second.
      There is absolutely NO reason why this technology shouldn't be democratized and produced at an affordable price that would make it available to the masses, and it's a shame how nobody is talking about this.

    • @gregkarris6869
      @gregkarris6869 6 лет назад +22

      Large media companies want to go to a Pay-Per-View/Pay-Per-Play model where you stream everything and pay each time you play/view it instead of owning. Hence they really, really want these old physical formats to go away...

    • @stemnozzel542
      @stemnozzel542 6 лет назад +1

      You want the remastered ones. The used to put the album mix right on CD's, and it would sound harsh. Source tape remixed for digital expands the dynamic range. Of course, it depends on the quality of the remix and the source recording...

  • @RhythmBoy
    @RhythmBoy 6 лет назад +104

    Cassette is still my all-time favorite format. I used to collect blank ones when I was in High School and even record my favorite CD albums to play on my Sony Walkman. It was just another level of cool.

    • @Musicradio77Network
      @Musicradio77Network 6 лет назад +2

      RythmBoy Me too. I still enjoyed them on vinyl. I always want to get these on eBay if they still sell blank cassettes both new or new old stock brands from the 1970's through the 1990's along with my recent one, the Superscope C-101A, a variation of "CassetteMaster's" Superscope C-101 that he made a video about it back in 2010. It has full of AC bias. Still a great cassette recorder by Superscope.

    • @QuadTubeChannel
      @QuadTubeChannel 6 лет назад

      i was told that 'modern' blank audio cassettes aren't as good quality as their older versions but I haven't really looked into it.

    • @chuy8356
      @chuy8356 5 лет назад

      I also did that, but I did it because portable cd players skip a lot, even the good ones. They also eat up batteries faster than my Walkman.

    • @williamli7477
      @williamli7477 5 лет назад

      Cassette is friendlier then R2R. The music copied from CD players to cassette have the advantage of filtering out the above audio freq noises to produce more pleasant sound.

    • @BugzKiller
      @BugzKiller 5 лет назад

      I use the High Bias for my Tascam 4 track recorder....today!@@NintendoDude888

  • @OriginalGrasshopper
    @OriginalGrasshopper 5 лет назад +22

    I just saw the incredible Death Valley Girls in concert and they were selling cassettes of their latest album for just $5 at the merch stand! (CD’s were $10 and vinyl was $15). I saw more people buying their cassettes than either of the other two formats.

  • @davidconde1521
    @davidconde1521 6 лет назад +74

    I'm installing a cassette radio on my car now for 2018

    • @KingBlonde
      @KingBlonde 5 лет назад +4

      Yeah same hahah I got a cassette deck brand new with an aux input for my phone, best of both worlds!

    • @donnahudson4241
      @donnahudson4241 5 лет назад +3

      Already got one an original one from Volkswagen and its stayed in my car since it was new 2002

    • @Emily-es2xf
      @Emily-es2xf 5 лет назад +1

      my car already has one built in lol

    • @mosesbrowning8055
      @mosesbrowning8055 4 года назад +3

      Yep I just installed a brand new old stock Aiwa tape deck in my old truck. I love it and love old tech. I m probably the only one in the past 30_years who is gonna have their wedding recorded on a Sony Betamax camcorder

  • @popitinpete
    @popitinpete 6 лет назад +93

    Some of my cassettes are approaching their half century. No deterioration.

    • @raksh9
      @raksh9 5 лет назад +5

      I have many cassettes from the early 80s, making them 30 years old. Some are 25, 20 years old, and still going.

    • @xpxp2839
      @xpxp2839 5 лет назад +3

      only for those high quality tape

    • @biggestlive9207
      @biggestlive9207 4 года назад +3

      Well id assume the glue has started to wear off. Surely they are making your player dirtier than new ones. However, its still really impressive that they didnt loose any audio quality or get damages in other ways.

    • @kirkmooneyham
      @kirkmooneyham 4 года назад +3

      My oldest tape I recorded is probably just under 30 years old; still plays fine and sounds good. I didn't buy many "expensive" blank cassettes but I did buy name brands like TDK and Maxell. Most of the problems people had were from car stereos they let get dirty, or buying cheap tapes like Certron.

    • @joechlystun7979
      @joechlystun7979 3 года назад +1

      i've got many
      that the tape is a bit stuck as the lubricant on the tape is shot

  • @MAR108
    @MAR108 6 лет назад +56

    Man I remember recording songs off the radio into my cassettes

    • @enricosanchez894
      @enricosanchez894 3 года назад +1

      I remember doing that like it was yesterday. Waitaminute, it WAS only yesterday!

    • @MrX-ni3tp
      @MrX-ni3tp 3 года назад

      @@enricosanchez894 XD

    • @ACommenterOnYouTube
      @ACommenterOnYouTube 2 года назад

      Ahh we ALL did back in the 80's and 90's ... Especially on friday and saturday nights when the DJ came on to do his 2 hr special mixing .. Here in Orlando fla we had a station called 102 Jams and they would do their "thunderstorm" mix which included a lot of new songs and they would mix them so good, we used to record that on the cassette to play during the week ...
      The good times 😀

  • @loganmacgyver2625
    @loganmacgyver2625 6 лет назад +503

    im the weirdo kid at my school who loves old tech
    I get called a caveman for using a walkman but I don't care

    • @blackham7
      @blackham7 6 лет назад +43

      Logan MacGyver OMG You use them too I'm the same kid at my school do you use it in public do people stare or anything?? I'm too scared to use my Walkman in public

    • @QuadTubeChannel
      @QuadTubeChannel 6 лет назад +32

      Screw 'em. You're using that format because you like it, because you prefer it. I still have tons of tapes lying around..and old amps. I keep them because to my ears they sounds more engaging.
      I have Simon and Garfunkel's greatest hits and Genesis' Invisible Touch on CD..I also have them on tape and the latter, well to me it sounds totally different as in 10x better. Whereas the CD sounds flat and fatiguing (even in very expensive equipment), the tape versions positively bristle with energy.
      Some people prefer digital audio, but I always say that regardless of the format or cost, it's what your own ears prefer that's most important.

    • @kylereese5869
      @kylereese5869 6 лет назад +16

      Looks like Sony are gonna make new Walkmans. With Dolby S Noise Reduction.

    • @QuadTubeChannel
      @QuadTubeChannel 6 лет назад +2

      Thanks for the heads up, Super Axel10. I wonder if they'll be genuine quality items or just mass-produced, over-priced rubbish.

    • @kylereese5869
      @kylereese5869 6 лет назад +1

      Also you can program and repeat tracks.

  • @Jeffmorgan83
    @Jeffmorgan83 3 года назад +4

    There's something about physical media that just feels special. Spending a Friday night listening to music and organizing a collection of tapes, CD's and records all around you. Some of the happiest memories of my younger days.

  • @peterregorsek1504
    @peterregorsek1504 6 лет назад +26

    Today many bands are releasing their albums on a cassette tape because of financial reason. CD`s are not popular, but releasing album on vinyl is very expensive, because the whole process from mastering for a record to cutting master disc is expensive and you need to make a lot of copies, which maybe won`t be sold in the next months. Production of a cassette is very cheap and not risky, you can make also only 30 copies, which is not possible by other formats.

  • @LiftFan
    @LiftFan 6 лет назад +15

    It's one of those things from our childhood that gives a sense of nostalgia. They still have a use in many cars since lots have tapedecks and they won't skip like a CD does going over a speed bump or pothole.

    • @catsbyondrepair
      @catsbyondrepair 6 лет назад

      LiftFan i have a cd player in my dune buggy it has never skipped once even jumping it

    • @pHD77
      @pHD77 6 лет назад

      If a CD player skips due to speed bump, that player has a very little buffer memory

    • @GlamStacheessnostalgialounge
      @GlamStacheessnostalgialounge 6 лет назад

      I never had money to buy a modern enough car with a CD player and those aftermarket CD players look out of place in it so I always stuck to cassettes.

    • @HiFiHobby79
      @HiFiHobby79 6 лет назад

      Even though I am a long-time tape collector and enthusiast I consider tapes having more hardware related issues than CDs and mp3s when used in cars. For instance, the tape transport mechanism and, above all, the head of a car stereo can become extremely hot during summer, causing damage to the fine tape during playback (especially if significantly worn-out). Tape never skips in a car stereo but vibration sometimes can cause audible wow and flutter. Thus, using cassetes in car stereos requires a more careful approach, if you are a more hifi-oriented enthusiast.

  • @Bendew
    @Bendew 5 лет назад +7

    I remember these so much. When I was about 7, I remember going to Chuck E Cheese for my birthday, and one of my gifts was a cassette tape recorder that I had asked for. I remember recording some of my Dad’s favorite radio stations on to them, and then giving them to him as gifts. I will never forget that.

  • @raulsoler951
    @raulsoler951 4 года назад +6

    I'm 15 years old and I've been reocrding cassettes since I was 9 and they all still be perfect. Greetings from Spain!!!

    • @sebastianchibrac4877
      @sebastianchibrac4877 4 года назад

      I'm 18 and I still record on cassettes too. Greetings from Germany!!!

  • @TimRyanYpsilanti
    @TimRyanYpsilanti 6 лет назад +15

    #15: Cassettes have automatic memory built into them. You can stop the tape, turn off the player and be right there where you left off when you turn it on again. Even on a different machine. Same works for VHS--instant restart, try that with a DVD.
    I also made many mix tapes...over a dozen comedy tapes, plenty of pop music tapes, and over 15 Heavyweights (what would now be called Classic Rock, except with more variety) tapes.
    I had my problems trying to play (digitize) regurgitapes. Cheap tapes that had to be opened, take out the reels and put them into a premium shell so they would play.

  • @rivards1
    @rivards1 6 лет назад +19

    The main reason is because the circa Y2K cars driven by most hipsters still have built-in cassette decks!

    • @V081WLBlue
      @V081WLBlue 5 лет назад +1

      LOL, class... fekkin Hippsters!!!

  • @atlastobin7837
    @atlastobin7837 4 года назад +8

    I'm 16 and just made my first cassette mixtape, I bought a Magnavox boombox for $9.99 from value village, put in some blank tapes, and recorded a mixtape from my iPhone using an adapter. I recorded songs from Billie Eilish, pink Floyd, Radiohead, Coldplay, and Queen. All on one 60 minute mixtape. Another great thing about cassettes is that it persuades you to listen to the entire album, not just the popular songs played on the radio. This allows people to better understand their favorite bands and their less popular songs, I appreciate erasure and rem more knowing some of their lesser-known songs.

    • @Lucrativecris
      @Lucrativecris 4 года назад +2

      Ah you remind me of my 16 yr old self im now 20 but yes i started my tape collection when i was 16 now i have 235 cassettes all 4 types Type1 2 3 4

    • @wolfetteplays8894
      @wolfetteplays8894 Год назад +1

      Same, except I’ve been a ton of practice mixtapes. Helps me practice and hear all of it

  • @BrooksSeanRobinson
    @BrooksSeanRobinson 3 года назад +26

    I can attest to cassette durability. I recently digitized all of my old recordings from different formats. Most of my old DAT tapes had become sticky and snapped when played, splicing them was a pain and ultimately did not work because the tape is soooo thin. Reel to reel holds up mostly but my old reel to reel player didn't work anymore and the machines are expensive. My minidiscs held up ok but again my old player didn't work anymore (despite being high end when it came out). Same with my old miniDV camera, had to borrow a standalone deck. DVCPro? Good luck finding one of those decks. Ditto with broadcast carts. VCR's are easy enough to find but for some reason the old vhs tapes seem to degrade over time. The ONLY format I had no problems with was cassette. I was surprised at how good they sounded. To think they were the cheapest format at the time I recorded them.

  • @RichardVernadeau
    @RichardVernadeau 6 лет назад +82

    Old tech never dies, it just comes back even stronger once rediscovered and appreciated!

    • @Hugmir
      @Hugmir 2 года назад +1

      I'm pretty sure 8track remains relatively dead.

    • @RichardVernadeau
      @RichardVernadeau 2 года назад

      @@Hugmir agreed. It hasn't enjoyed the retro comeback that vinyl record albums and (to a lesser extent) cassettes are enjoying.

    • @imark7777777
      @imark7777777 2 года назад

      Yeah comes back after we realize we threw the baby out with the bathwater mostly because some company promised something better and didn't fully deliver rushing it to market

    • @RichardVernadeau
      @RichardVernadeau 2 года назад +1

      @@imark7777777 Blu-ray, while great, isn't great enough of an improvement over DVD to warrant the higher price of a player and to make you throw your DVD collection out and replace it with Blu-Rays. Not for the average person at least. That's one example

    • @bubba842
      @bubba842 2 месяца назад

      Yeah I don't think 8 track is coming back anytime soon. Even though they are cool, cassettes are so much better.

  • @benm8503
    @benm8503 6 лет назад +18

    A whole record shop full of Herb Alpert's Whipped Cream? Count me in I'm visiting at least once a week

    • @DrunkNotIAm
      @DrunkNotIAm 6 лет назад +1

      Ben M8 That's what I was thinking, I have virtually all of Alpert's LP's now.

  • @radwarriortv
    @radwarriortv 11 месяцев назад +3

    I graduated 2012 and my whole highschool experience, I skated to school with a general electric boom box I found at goodwill for $10 and had my leather jacket lined up with about 5 tapes. Such good memories with my buddies finding old thrash metal tapes, blasting down town or hell, in the main halls to clear a path. If you can't see the picture, I brutally tested vintage tapes ans they still work to this day. Tapes are eternal!!!

  • @verastaki
    @verastaki 4 года назад +12

    Compact cassettes are awesome!!! I got over 2,000 of them in my collection. I've been recording and praying my tapes at parties and weddings. I've been recording my favorite dance music shows on radio. I've been buying tapes at the music stores, giving them business. I've been fixing tape decks for friends and people who love cassettes. What I love the most about compact cassettes is that you can fine tune the sound of compact cassettes and make them sound better than CD'S

    • @jaimecastillo5876
      @jaimecastillo5876 4 года назад +1

      How can you make them sound better than cds?? I want to know.

    • @JoeJ-8282
      @JoeJ-8282 2 года назад +3

      Yeah, cassettes can sound very CLOSE to as good as a CD, (as long as it's recorded with/on a very high quality, properly and fully calibrated cassette deck, and with properly adjusted recording levels, and (preferably a 3-head cassette deck), using a high quality Type IV Metal tape like TDK, AND utilizing Dolby S noise reduction, (the best noise reduction ever introduced for cassettes)), but cassettes cannot sound any BETTER than a well mastered studio quality CD, that's just not physically possible.

  • @afj2276
    @afj2276 6 лет назад +52

    The day they bring back media that has not gone through loudness equalisation and auto tune will be the day that music will truly be cool again.

    • @nickwallette6201
      @nickwallette6201 6 лет назад +3

      ^ Truth.

    • @Jeffrey314159
      @Jeffrey314159 6 лет назад +3

      Yes, there was a RUclips video posting about that very issue: Why All Music Sounds The Same These Days

    • @Hordes_Of_Nebulah
      @Hordes_Of_Nebulah 6 лет назад +2

      The scary thing is that it has been going on for around 3 decades and we're just now starting to break that cycle. I say ban Rick Rubin from producing more records and everything should even itself out in a few years haha.

    • @enemyofthestatevcdking5982
      @enemyofthestatevcdking5982 6 лет назад +1

      Yes it was proven in 1995 they just increased cd overall loudness +10, when you know...you can turn volume knob.

    • @northwindkey
      @northwindkey 6 лет назад

      Hordes Of Nebulah I still can't get over Death Magnetic.

  • @TheComputerGuy96
    @TheComputerGuy96 6 лет назад +14

    When I was about 9 or 10 years old (in 2005-2006), I used to play with audio cassette tapes a lot, even if they were obsolete. And I still have a crappy mix tape I made with random children's songs and pop songs. Cassettes were certainly a lot of fun.

    • @MitchMatch5
      @MitchMatch5 6 лет назад +1

      same thing I was doing in 2005, I was about 13 tho, I started rapping by playing beats off soundclick.com and recording them into my portable tape recorder. Cassettes were more fun than cd's for the fact that they were reusable, it took a lot to break them, and you could record yourself or other sources of music on them. Happy you got to experience cassettes tho!

  • @birdysama2980
    @birdysama2980 3 года назад +5

    i have discovered my parents cassette collection while looking for vhs in our basement a week ago. Told my dad and he told me our players were busted (mid 80 sanyo boombox and a 2004 craig radio) so i worked on them and eventually repaired the 2004 radio. I am so glad! Cassette is now my favorite medium to work while listening to music since im not disturbed by constant phone or computer notifications and advertisements from youtube or spotify. (im an 18 year old that love old stuff)

    • @Blackadder75
      @Blackadder75 3 месяца назад

      just turn off notifications, and block ads. it's ok to have weird hobbies, but don't make up fake reasons

    • @birdysama2980
      @birdysama2980 3 месяца назад

      @@Blackadder75 I ain't making reasons???? I just prefer those mediums to listen to my stuff. It's not being quirky I just want to disconnect a bit from smart phones and computers 😭 Adblock ain't blocking shit nowadays

  • @djjosueofficial9129
    @djjosueofficial9129 6 лет назад +22

    Watching videos like these make me want to buy a cassette Player and a cassette tape to recording all 2018 music 😍😍😍😍😍😍 i was born in 1997 and i love the music in that format

  • @Zuwie4
    @Zuwie4 6 лет назад +41

    5 Reasons why papyrus is cool again in 2018. 1. Papyrus is much lighter than clay tablets. 2. It takes a lot of effort to carve letters on clay tablets, while you can use ink on papyrus. 3. You cannot use a printing press on clay tablets. 4. Unlike clay tablets, papyrus can be rolled into a tube. 5. Papyrus plants are abundant and easily grown.

  • @grizzlywhisker
    @grizzlywhisker 6 лет назад +9

    i just recently came across your channel over the past couple weeks, just wanted to say thanks for all the awesome content. i love classic computers/hardware and all your videos show off some really cool stuff i haven't seen in what feels like ages. keep up the awesome work dude.

  • @kcgunesq
    @kcgunesq 5 лет назад +7

    I bought my first CD player around 1987. IIRC, my first two albums were Joshua Tree and an assortment of baroque music. I was blown away by the quality difference then and the ability to play selected tracks instantly was mind-blowing. To this day, CD is still my preferred purchase format. That is, if I am going to spend money to buy an album, I'll buy it on CD, rip it lossless and play it from a USB drive. The ability to subscribe to a music service and have millions of songs wherever I go is pretty hard to beat most of the time. But for enjoying music or background to a family gathering, CD's (or lossless copies) played on a proper receiver with floor standing speakers is still the way to go for me.

  • @DaveFlash
    @DaveFlash 6 лет назад +148

    i actually think cassette's aren't cool again.......
    THEY ALWAYS WERE!!!!!

    • @ipiap
      @ipiap 5 лет назад

      They are, until they get ...

    • @insomnolence655
      @insomnolence655 5 лет назад

      They had us at the first half, not gonna lie

    • @ZeroKyle
      @ZeroKyle 3 года назад +1

      @@insomnolence655 true

  • @cbmeeks
    @cbmeeks 6 лет назад +36

    When did cassettes stop being cool? I guess I missed that memo. ;-)

    • @bogdog999
      @bogdog999 6 лет назад +3

      "Digital" came out, and everyone was so excited. How could we know back then that CDs would sound so harsh and tinny compared to LP records?

  • @larryshaver3568
    @larryshaver3568 6 лет назад +116

    cassettes have advantages cd's don't have, for one thing they don't scratch

    • @chadjohnson-authormusician8072
      @chadjohnson-authormusician8072 5 лет назад +17

      @Mr. Hellas In my experience --- over 30 years dealing with cassettes --- I never had a cassette break on me --- not one. I had one cassette get eaten by a machine ... in 30 years.
      CDs and DVDs? In my 20 years of dealing with them, I've dealt with countless scratched ones. Not so much my own personal (although I've certainly had a few), because I generally take very good care of my stuff, but buying used ones is always a crap shoot. And man ... when Netfilx first came out as a DVD service, it was awful! I swear every third DVD I got from them was scratched. We didn't keep our membership for very long.

    • @chadjohnson-authormusician8072
      @chadjohnson-authormusician8072 5 лет назад +4

      @Mr. Hellas LOL ... I guess the last 35 years of my life must have been a dream then. Thanks for setting me straight on that.

    • @adrinathegreat3095
      @adrinathegreat3095 5 лет назад +4

      Except they get chewed sound all wobbly and get wiped when near a magnet.
      End of the day everyone is sat on RUclips watching and posting because we've embraced the new technology and forced the old technology out.

    • @cleverkitsune4302
      @cleverkitsune4302 4 года назад +6

      Biggest annoyance is the pressure pad eventualy falls off inside

    • @clamshell6863
      @clamshell6863 4 года назад +2

      @@KoiYokan That is why you should put them back in cases when you are finished with them. I still have my cassettes in their cases and they all sound great. I also like the fact they were Dolby analog unlike CD's.

  • @alankozak288
    @alankozak288 5 лет назад +13

    I'm old school! Cassettes are getting more popular again! Be proud you like and collect cassettes.I love to collect cassettes! ❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @alexkuhn5078
    @alexkuhn5078 6 лет назад +7

    Some theorize that it may actually be the compact disc that finally dies out for good. After all, if you want physical media, might as well go analog. If you want digital, just download or stream. There's really no purpose for the optical disc any more.

  • @MattHayesVinyl
    @MattHayesVinyl 6 лет назад +11

    Omg so I was told I have a cameo in this video and, sure enough, there I am! Thanks for the credit. And a great video too (yours I mean). Cassettes are indeed making a bit of a comeback and it's nice to see. They can sound fantastic with a good tape, good source, and good deck.

  • @jhonwask
    @jhonwask 2 года назад +16

    I was going thru some of my hundreds of cassettes and found many from the 70's. There are even a few demo recordings I had made using the magical editing of two cassette decks. Please make more cassette videos.

    • @johnvienta7622
      @johnvienta7622 Год назад +2

      I can understand the feeling.... I work at a charity shop and the boss got sick of the cassettes not selling well and told me to throw them out. I did, straight into the back seat of my car... lots of tapes in excellent condition, including boxed sets of 60's and 70's classics.

  • @JediWitness
    @JediWitness 6 лет назад +4

    I still have ALL my cassettes and VHS video tapes as well. I don't know why people suddenly felt the need to throw them all away just because of mp3's and DVR's were created.
    I know so many people that say they have some VHS tapes but have no VCR to play them in...I still have 5 VCR's including one still sitting in my TV stand in my room I'm looking at right now!
    I have put some of that stuff on my hard drives.. But it's too much with to put it all in there so I just left it alone. Tons of memories including some of my mom who bought me several and introduced me to a few special artists I've lived since the 80's precisely because she bought me a specific cassette.

  • @massapower
    @massapower 6 лет назад +17

    I have audio Cassettes from the early 80's, and they still sound AMAZING!

  • @faithless8888
    @faithless8888 6 лет назад +15

    So glad I still have my DCC player laying around! Just found it in my storagecabinet a while back. Still works perfect. And the beautiful thing is that, besides being able to play digital DCC cassettes, they can play the "original" analog tapes as wel! :-) time to dig up my tapebox!! :-D

  • @KenSerpico5450
    @KenSerpico5450 3 года назад +4

    I recorded over 100 of my favorite morning FM talk shows and evening music programs that are now off the air now but can enjoy listening to today.

    • @Dwall44
      @Dwall44 2 года назад +1

      Awesome! What stations did you record? You know there are RUclips channels dedicated to posting audio of old radio shows. Perhaps you could consider posting some of yours at some point.

    • @Blackadder75
      @Blackadder75 3 месяца назад

      you don't need a cassette for that, you could record 1000 shows on your ipod and have a much easier time organizing and playing them

    • @KenSerpico5450
      @KenSerpico5450 3 месяца назад

      @@Dwall44 One of the evening programs I recorded was, "Musical Starstreams", which was an ambient music type program. As for the morning show, it the local morning FM station program by two local DJs.

  • @BrooksSeanRobinson
    @BrooksSeanRobinson 3 года назад +9

    I would love to hear the full audio of your radio recordings from the 70's, the snippets you play are fascinating

  • @AttilaSVK
    @AttilaSVK 6 лет назад +71

    Reason #14: record players usually don't come with VU meters, but every decent cassette deck will have one. Some, like the Alpine AL-80 will have a more interesting one, than the regular needle- or LED/VFD based. Isn't it fun to watch the needles bouncing or the LEDs blinking to the rhythm of the music you're listening to? :)
    Oh, and that 1.9 TDI sound at 11:40 is just lovely :) Greetings from a fellow 2.5 TDI driver (it's the same engine, but with a cylinder more - most likely it never got to the U.S., here in Europe it was popular in the Audi 100/A6 (C4), the Volvo S70, V70, S80, S60 and V70 II, while Volvo didn't have its own diesel engine, and with the VW Transporter T4 and T5)

    • @DiThi
      @DiThi 6 лет назад +4

      VU meters are most useful while recording, so you can avoid clipping. In fact I have some old reel to reel tape recorders where the VU meters only work while recording.

    • @AttilaSVK
      @AttilaSVK 6 лет назад +3

      I know, but it's still fun to look at them during playback, especially the mirror based ones in the AL-80. In fact, the VU meters in my Revox G36 do work only during recording, and my Otari MX55 doesn't have any, because (like most of R2Rs designed for studio use) it has a fixed gain, matched to the output of a mixing console, so the meters of the console are showing the actual recording levels.

    • @DiThi
      @DiThi 6 лет назад +2

      I agree, VU meters have a special kind of charm. I looked at them for a very long time when I was a kid.

    • @dadautube
      @dadautube 6 лет назад +1

      some cassette tape recorder decks of old times have a special function added to their VU meters, which is truly useful indeed: there's a 'peak capture' button you press and then you let a vinyl record or other sound source play its entire length ...
      in the end, you check out the peak capture setting, where the needle stays fixed on a certain spot in the range ... it shows what the peak value of the source sound is ...
      now, after you actually test-record on the tape at that peak moment of the original sound source and play it back to check the peak capture setting again, you'll find out how much loss in sound input/output has occured so as to readjust recording volume accordingly ...
      i'm sure it's possible to do something like that using digital LED and other tools too, but this particular method just mentioned, i saw on a very high quality cassette tape recorder deck decades ago, which i have never seen anywhere else ... can't remember what brand it was ... was a famous one anyway ...

    • @THEtechknight
      @THEtechknight 6 лет назад +2

      Yep, I have a large collection of vacuum fluorescent display VU meters, kind of a fetish/addiction of mine. Ever since I was a tiny kid and saw the VFD VU meter on my moms technics cassette deck, I fell in love. lol.

  • @jayjordan5555
    @jayjordan5555 6 лет назад +21

    I still have my cassettes, Sony Walkman, and my vintage 80's cassette woodgrain case!

  • @hannahfrench129
    @hannahfrench129 3 года назад +4

    Interesting video. The image is my wife and son. I am not Hannah, I am her husband Paul. Anyway, I had hundreds of self help tapes from the 80s and I still retain a few of the best. I also have tapes my parents exchanged with me by mail when I was in the army. I went into basic training in June of 1980 and I had received a compact tape recorder for my HS graduation so I took it to basic with me and when I was busy polishing my boots or cleaning my rifle I could make a tape when I had no time to write. I have about 10 tapes that survived. My dad was smart enough to make copies because my original plan was for them to tape over my tape with new messages to send me and reuse the same tapes but my dad had the foresight to save many of them by making copies and I am so glad he did. My mom died in 1982 and I can still listen to her voice on the tapes. My dad died a few years ago but I can let my kids here what he was like before he got old. They all came along after 2000 so they never knew him very well at all. Cassette tapes played a big part of my life. My cassette collection of self help tapes, army tapes, and a few music tapes, were one of my most important possessions in my life.

  • @Erzahler
    @Erzahler 6 лет назад +5

    I'm glad I never threw away my cassette tapes! I still have most of the tapes I've purchased or made back in the 80's and 90's, especially those I made of just recording the radio stations, which includes my copies of "CBS Radio Mystery Theatre" which I recorded off of Denver's KOA-AM 850 kHz back in the early 90's. Who hears those on the radio anymore? And all of my compact stereo cubes still have a cassette player/recorder.
    Hey, thanks for this brief trip back on the Wayback Machine! Gonna go listen to some of those tapes right now! 🎧📻

  • @shannonm75
    @shannonm75 6 лет назад +15

    Nice throwback. I grew up on cassette tapes and recorders. We spent hours as kids recording stories and voice acting.

    • @martymcfly5434
      @martymcfly5434 5 лет назад +1

      I did that too!!

    • @martymcfly5434
      @martymcfly5434 5 лет назад +2

      I recently bought a cassette for 150 dollars!! It was out of print!!

  • @kamuy_1337
    @kamuy_1337 6 лет назад +27

    I love cassettes, because it had moving parts and analog sound.

    • @SPAZZOID100
      @SPAZZOID100 6 лет назад +1

      Kamuy1337 records are analog, and sound much better. Cd’s are digital, and sound better than both.

    • @estebanod
      @estebanod 2 года назад +1

      @@SPAZZOID100 first one is true.
      But CD don't sound better than Vinyls. CD are stuck at 16/44.1 while record are at 24/96

  • @AndersEngerJensen
    @AndersEngerJensen 6 лет назад +5

    Oooh.. Kristine and I are happy to see our Silverimage cassette ended up here. Thanks! Hope you've enjoyed it so far. :D

  • @martinagriffin1981
    @martinagriffin1981 Год назад +3

    Well done .I've never stopped listening to my cassettes and recording for past 45 years and still have them all.By far the best music format of all.

  • @TheZooman22
    @TheZooman22 6 лет назад +6

    The cassette was magical. It was the first portable media , aside from the 8 Track which was a bit clunky. You could pop one into a Sony Walkman, and have your own personalized listening experience, a mix that you created.

  • @wilkes85
    @wilkes85 6 лет назад +49

    Fantastic video! Those of us who never abandoned cassettes have known this all along, even when everyone else would bash the format simply because they're "old." This is just one of the many reasons why it's not a good idea to toss out your media when society deems the format it's on "obsolete." It's really cool that cassettes are coming back, but when you think about it, they really haven't been gone very long. You could still get new releases on tape until the mid '00s, tape players were still in stores well into the '10s, and blank tapes never left some stores at all. This whole cassette resurgence is really just caused by the current retro fad, but whatever the reason, it's still awesome to see cassettes make a comeback.

    • @janchristianursuaaguilar7434
      @janchristianursuaaguilar7434 6 лет назад

      i do have a cassette from a japanese thrift store here in where i live, i think it was asami rei who is a takaradzuka artist.

    • @Bobbythefanman
      @Bobbythefanman 6 лет назад +1

      wilkes85 I listen to Conway twitty on cassette

    • @Blackadder75
      @Blackadder75 3 месяца назад

      you guys are delusional, it's ok to love old things, I do to or I would never have found a yt channel like this, but you all only see a few cool features of cassettes and forget the massive DISADVANTAGES, which are the reason they stopped being relevant in most of the world decades ago....

  • @Bendew
    @Bendew 5 лет назад +7

    I love how much variety is on your channel

  • @bernardkelar6089
    @bernardkelar6089 6 лет назад +8

    An excellent video of cassette tapes. Growing up in the 70's I used both reel to reel and cassette tapes for recording music. I recorded the very last Radio Luxembourg show, consisting of six tapes and 6 hours recording time. I still have all my tapes from earliest 1975 and edited with splicing and joining recorded top 20 shows to eliminate disc jockey interfering through talk. Many, many happy memories and I agree that recording quality is better. I hope they make a come back.

    • @jeromeglick
      @jeromeglick 2 года назад

      Are you referring to the last show on 30 December 1992? I recommend that you digitize it for historical preservation

    • @Dwall44
      @Dwall44 11 месяцев назад

      Do you still have all your stuff? Some people would love to hear that radio show and any others you may have. They’re actually RUclips channels dedicated to posting that type of stuff.

  • @uxwbill
    @uxwbill 6 лет назад +63

    A very well done video! When I'm making mixtapes, I find myself thinking more about what song should come next. I'd add a 14th reason, too: cassettes having a longer runtime than compact discs are readily available and most machines work perfectly well with them.
    I still have many of the tapes I recorded during my childhood, from the radio and the microphones built into most of the recorders.
    Anyone who's looking for some very good normal and high bias tape would do well to get in touch with National Audio Company.

    • @beerrox711
      @beerrox711 6 лет назад +1

      uxwbill reminds me i never really burned CDs as a teen i still recorded my fav tunes off of the internet on tape.

    • @themisfitsmessiah
      @themisfitsmessiah 6 лет назад +1

      I thought that was your voice at first on the cassette.

    • @swampwiz
      @swampwiz 6 лет назад +1

      I've got a "mix tape" on my SanDisk player's mini SDHC that holds 32 GB, AND NO TAPE HISS!

    • @Jeffrey314159
      @Jeffrey314159 6 лет назад

      What's the difference between compact cassettes, minicassettes, and/or microcassettes - - other than size?

    • @brentfisher902
      @brentfisher902 6 лет назад

      If you take the tape stock out of the MC-90 Ninety Minute microcassette dictation tapes and splice and wind them into a C-Zero standard cassette shell you can get a standard cassette that gives you 192 minutes or 96 minutes on each side in stereo at normal speed. That way you can record a whole 1800 foot 3-3/4 ips stereo dual side reel to reel tape on a single cassette. It takes about 3 hours to capture the sound of a whole era of music...

  • @fueledbymusic3
    @fueledbymusic3 6 лет назад +61

    I STILL have my 500 cassette collection I had since the early 80's! I even have a video of my collection!

    • @Gregor7677
      @Gregor7677 6 лет назад +4

      Gilbert Arciniega Good for you. I still have mine and use them too.

    • @chrisdigitalartist
      @chrisdigitalartist 6 лет назад +1

      Gilbert Arciniega Hey! It's Gilbert!

    • @Miketendo93
      @Miketendo93 5 лет назад +1

      Sounds Awesome!!! :)

    • @rodolforodriguez4203
      @rodolforodriguez4203 5 лет назад +1

      You must wait until Beta format be cool again to watch the video of your collection once more

    • @SamiJumppanen
      @SamiJumppanen 5 лет назад +1

      Umm... you just (9 months ago, to be exact) gave me an idea. I will take VHS video of my cassettes. I will do other footage as well, but cassettes... didn't think of that :)

  • @jrand2631
    @jrand2631 6 лет назад +4

    This really bring back memories. I have deeply regretted many times that I threw all my cassette tapes out, back in the mid 90s. I bought my first CD-player in mid 80s, and more or less retired my Cassette Player, although I waited almost a decade before I finally pulled myself together and dumped the tapes - I wish I had never done that - so many great tapes, lost forever! 😕😕😕

  • @miabussell0229
    @miabussell0229 5 лет назад +70

    Thank you for making fun of Vinyl Eyezz

    • @KingBlonde
      @KingBlonde 5 лет назад +12

      Can't stand that pompous dick

    • @sentry1234
      @sentry1234 4 года назад +2

      Hes ok but he is annoying sometimes

    • @thatguyatthatplace4941
      @thatguyatthatplace4941 4 года назад +1

      I thought the same thing!

    • @RUFITNESS
      @RUFITNESS 3 года назад

      Ok they are different channels and have different opinions on things but just cause you don’t agree on some things he said doesn’t mean you go hating on him.

    • @miabussell0229
      @miabussell0229 3 года назад

      Flex Appeal by Chasity why do you care lol

  • @Terry.W
    @Terry.W 6 лет назад +203

    Wow I had no idea cassette tapes were coming back....I have hundreds in my loft and many live DJ mixes ...great they are coming back.

    • @rollingtroll
      @rollingtroll 6 лет назад +15

      Nearly 10.000 NEW cassette releases (also re-eleases, obviously, but still new) have been added to Discogs this year. That's how much they are coming back.

    • @prfo5554
      @prfo5554 6 лет назад +9

      Same, I am surprised that they are coming back considering how undesired they were for years by most people. Just wait until CDs from the 1980s and early 90s begin making a comeback.

    • @jesusrodriguez242
      @jesusrodriguez242 6 лет назад +5

      Last year at the sxsw music festival in Austin TX almost a quarter of the performing bands were selling their music in cassette only

    • @RealHomeRecording
      @RealHomeRecording 6 лет назад +9

      Cassettes are stupid.

    • @watershed44
      @watershed44 6 лет назад +5

      PR Fo
      Thing is that CD are digital and the main reason why people like vinyl and CC is because they are analog and the sound quality is more smooth to the human ear.

  • @mcearl8073
    @mcearl8073 6 лет назад +11

    It’s funny you released this video today, I was just at a flea market today and the one guy that sells music and he was saying cassettes are making a comeback. I was a bit surprised, but it does make sense when I think about it. I personally loved cassettes. They were so durable and could play anywhere and would always work. CDs were terrible for me, I wouldn’t be good about taking care of them and they’d get scratched and skip. It was nice being able to go right to a track but otherwise cassettes were the most robust. I’ve never had a machine eat a tape either, worst case a little bit pulls out and you wind it back in, no big deal.

  • @commodoresixfour7478
    @commodoresixfour7478 4 года назад +2

    I have a recent story to tell about mix tapes. They are like books and tell a lasting story.
    Back in 2007 I bought my Uncles home and he left a few things in the basement, including 3 cassette mix tapes. Now about 1.5 years ago he passed away and a few weeks ago I had the opportunity to buy his old but very nice truck. I had to replace the speakers in it and wanted to test the tape deck, because it's been a long time since I used one. For some reason I couldn't find any of my cassette tapes right away, but instead found these 3 dirty old tapes.
    Talk about emotional listing to them. Since he passed I've been listening to "Wish you were here" a lot thinking about him. I got goosebumps when on the second tape I heard it. It's the only Pink Floyd song on any of the tapes. I'd like to think it's him speaking beyond the grave.
    I also want to point out how good Chrysler car stereos sound from the mid 2000's with the combined CD and tape deck. I'm always into aftermarket car stereos and speakers, but I wanted to keep this truck as my Uncle had it.

  • @elhistoriero1227
    @elhistoriero1227 4 года назад +5

    I think this is an underrated format, for many years I was under the impression that cassettes were a crappy format, but when I got a Hifi system I decided to get a cassette deck just for the novelty of it and it sounded really good, I would say it sounds better than vinyl and I like vinyl. I just love the mechanism involved in playing a cassette tape, it is really an engineering achievement, so to me it's special listening to music that way instead of listening to some lifeless digital file.

    • @SrLobo90
      @SrLobo90 2 года назад +1

      La verdad es que si, el cassette es un formato muy subestimado, pero por una sencilla razón, la gente compraba equipos económicos todo en uno, tocadiscos, cassette, radio, cd, esos aparatos ofrecían una calidad de sonido muy justo en los cassettes, luego se escuchaba horriblemente mal.
      Cuando grabas con Dolby S, bien ecualizado, en una cinta de metal, con un deck con un buen wow and flutter (de 0.05 para abajo (los ultimos decks de gama media tenían un wow and flutter terribles, y si eres audofilio se nota)), podía equipararlo a un FLAC de 24 bits de 26khz.
      Yo tengo un deck Pioneer CT-F500 bastante antiguo del 79, con dolby b, con las cintas de cromo se oye de mil maravillas.
      Eso si, un reel to reel multipistas con Dolby S, eso era canela fina.

  • @KRAFTWERK2K6
    @KRAFTWERK2K6 6 лет назад +16

    Cassettes are killing the Woodglue industry :P

    • @GeoNeilUK
      @GeoNeilUK 6 лет назад

      Don't you mean home taping is killing wood glue?

  • @airingcupboard
    @airingcupboard 6 лет назад +7

    Great video by the way. Your stuff is consistently fun and interesting.

  • @devjock
    @devjock 6 лет назад +15

    8:27 Welp, that commercial made me look at used cars for a solid two hours. Wow, that takes me back.. And 300ZX's are hella cheap these days, holy crap! Tempting.. Sooo tempting..

  • @johnmaki3046
    @johnmaki3046 10 месяцев назад +2

    I have years of "Dr. Demento" recorded "over-air" from late '90s-early 2000s! How can you beat this GREAT STUFF?!

  • @mhmrules
    @mhmrules 6 лет назад +8

    I still have some of my old cassettes from 1991 when I was a baby. I think my mother still has her cassettes from a little further back.

  • @XMguy
    @XMguy 6 лет назад +8

    I grew up with tapes. I still use them. I have opened up tapes and repaired them.

  • @AemiliaJacobus
    @AemiliaJacobus 6 лет назад +2

    I discovered my mum and dad's tapes. Some are unfortunately worn because they were either taped from the radio or recorded from a vinyl record and are over 30 years old, but some of the 20 year old tapes have a lot of great 90s rave music and sound great. Even discovered a recording of my 16 year old mum playing about with the CB. They are truly wonderful time capsules.

  • @Jrodsly
    @Jrodsly 4 года назад +9

    You know, this makes me want to start buying some more cassettes and it might just make me put my attempt to collect records on hold for a little bit. I've got a few cassettes in my collection, but I definitely want more now.

    • @Jrodsly
      @Jrodsly 4 года назад

      A few days after I posted this comment, I went ahead and bought some cassettes from a local record store. 7 tapes for less than 11 bucks with tax, and that includes a couple Ozzy tapes with songs I love. I plan on going back to that record store when they have Cassette Store Day this year. Also planning on hitting up another record store tomorrow for more of them.

  • @WildDieWoodard
    @WildDieWoodard 6 лет назад +8

    Fun (and clever) video! S'funny... I just pulled out three plastic bins packed with cassettes from my childhood, teens, and 20s and I'm really looking forward to revisiting them! They include recorded albums, radio, TV shows, air-checks from my time on the air, and silly childhood comedy sketches, etc. Should be a lot of fun going through them!!!

  • @val058
    @val058 6 лет назад +7

    I think the WABC recording was the highlight because It has historical value unavailable anywhere else. It could be the only known recording of that particular moment in time for that station, for example.

  • @theoblivious2001
    @theoblivious2001 6 лет назад +3

    5:10 That is an awesome device. I love how it’s modern yet still vintage.

  • @Astolfo2001
    @Astolfo2001 2 года назад +20

    Thanks! Even though I was born in 2001, you, Cassette Comeback, and Techmoan have gotten me into the wonderful world of cassettes! I've managed to win an auction for a JVC PC-X200 boombox from 1989-1990 and I am now big into them. I am actually thinking of starting my very own cassette collection of as of me writing! 😄

    • @Astolfo2001
      @Astolfo2001 2 года назад +4

      Update:
      I am currently in the process of trying to repair my JVC PC-X200. However, I recently got my very first cassette tape: Voyage by ABBA (yes, the same ABBA that sung Dancing Queen and Gimme a Man after Midnight).

    • @lawline4508
      @lawline4508 2 года назад

      @@Astolfo2001 i want another update

    • @Astolfo2001
      @Astolfo2001 2 года назад

      @@lawline4508 Sadly, I foolishy disassembled it in hopes of getting it fixed seeing that the cassette deck couldn't rewind and fast forward. And now I am in search of a new (working) vintage cassette boombox now. The JVC PC-RV2J from 1987 seems like the best option right now so I am currently eyeing that model the most as it has a CD player, Dolby B NR, an aux input, and a mic input.

    • @lawline4508
      @lawline4508 2 года назад

      @@Astolfo2001 I’ve seen a jvc cassette deck and a tuner the full things name is jvc k7 it’s for 30 dollars but I will not be buying it because I have nowhere to put it sadly

    • @protocode_227
      @protocode_227 Год назад

      @@Astolfo2001 soz you opened it, but..? Why couldn't get it fixed? It wasn't just new belts then I guess?

  • @RobinMgp
    @RobinMgp 6 лет назад +64

    Nice Video. Great to see all of the people in this part of youtube (Techmoan, Vinyl Eyez, 8-Bit Guy, Vwestlife) working together and helping one another.
    Another reason I'd add is because if you listen to both sides of the tape, there is no rewinding required, because playing side 2 wound it back to side 1. It's not an advantage over record, but hey.
    Also, you can pause tapes and transport them, where with records you can't really.
    Probably some crappy cheap tool exists for marking where you paused a vinyl somewhere though!

    • @Hordes_Of_Nebulah
      @Hordes_Of_Nebulah 6 лет назад +4

      Some record players allow "pausing" by keeping the record spinning and lifting the stylus and holding it above the current spot. I put pausing in quotations because you never actually start back in the exact spot you left off but you are always within a couple seconds which is good enough. I know the Audio Technica LP60 (shown in the video at 2:45) has that feature as I used to use that turntable back when I was getting into records.

    • @RobinMgp
      @RobinMgp 6 лет назад +1

      Good point, but I’m talking about pausing a tape and bringing it over to a friend’s house for example and being able to resume right where you left off using their tape deck.

    • @Hordes_Of_Nebulah
      @Hordes_Of_Nebulah 6 лет назад +1

      Gotcha, I missed that one but I get what you are saying haha. The cassette and other various tapes are the only physical formats where that is even possible as CD restarts every time you put it in and you have to just remember where you were at on a record. Even digital music might loose its place if the battery on the player dies or it gets restarted whereas I could pick up a tape I last played in 1985 and resume as if nothing happened.

    • @user-ne4fm8zu8o
      @user-ne4fm8zu8o 6 лет назад

      Robin MGP I

    • @brentfisher902
      @brentfisher902 6 лет назад +2

      The VHS meme... Hasn't been played in 15 years....Still remembers where you left off.

  • @MariaEngstrom
    @MariaEngstrom 6 лет назад +13

    Still waiting for floppy disks also to be cool again so I can stack up on cheap 3½" DS-DD disks for my Amiga computers. :)

    • @rollingtroll
      @rollingtroll 6 лет назад +2

      I regularly find NOS disks at thrift shops for my Mavica ;).

    • @SteveRCPilot
      @SteveRCPilot 6 лет назад +1

      Ive been collecting minidiscs, similar to 2.5inch floppy and similar to tapes in some respects.

    • @brentfisher902
      @brentfisher902 6 лет назад

      Of course you probably don't remember the NTSC Composite Mavica camera which spun the tiny floppy disk at (1800 * (1000/1001)) revolutions per minute and recorded still video signals.

    • @AmigaA-or2hj
      @AmigaA-or2hj 5 лет назад

      Maria Engström I’m still using floppy disks for my Amigas. I also use them for my Sharp and Brother word processors.

  • @macraghnaill3553
    @macraghnaill3553 5 лет назад +4

    The point of a portable record player with plug attached is so that it can be used in any room, or for those of us around before cassettes being able to take record player and records to friends houses, cassette players/recorders when they first came out and before long life batteries had playing life span of 4 hours then had to have new batteries.

  • @wblynch
    @wblynch 4 года назад +2

    We used to find cassette tapes, walking along the road. I guess people would be driving, decide they hated that tape, and throw it out the window! LOL, I remember riding with a buddy now and then when it would happen. Always a good laugh.

  • @KurtWoloch
    @KurtWoloch 6 лет назад +4

    This is good to know because I still have about 800 cassette tapes (mostly self-recorded) and I was afraid of running out of equipment to play them on. For on-the-go, I use the same USB digitizing thingy you show in your video.

  • @artemorbid
    @artemorbid 6 лет назад +4

    Thanks very much for sharing your ideas. Btw! the sound of the narration is awesome, I really enjoy listening to you.

  • @alex4brave
    @alex4brave 4 года назад +3

    Through your video I feel like creating mix tapes again and giving them to my friends. How good that I never gave away my tape recorder. Now all I have to do is find good cassettes. : D

  • @JoeJ-8282
    @JoeJ-8282 2 года назад +4

    The key to never having your cassette tapes "eaten" by your tape decks, (including if you have one in your old car), is to regularly clean and maintain your cassette deck, both in the cleaning of the heads and pinch rollers and tape path guides, and also in replacing worn out or rotten belts inside the machines every few decades or so.

  • @aspectcarl
    @aspectcarl 6 лет назад +17

    Excellent video! One of your best. Cassette tapes are flexible and awesome!

  • @wildbilltexas
    @wildbilltexas 6 лет назад +4

    Awesome Video!! Last month I bought a JVC dual dubbing deck at Goodwill for 19 dollars. All it needed was a cleanup and it's working great. I plan to get some new belts for it soon. I still have several boxes of tapes since childhood so I dont plan to get rid of them anytime soon. The cassette never died as a format, despite record companies, blank tape manufacturers and home electronics companies trying to kill it off.

  • @kirkmooneyham
    @kirkmooneyham 4 года назад +2

    The only tapes I ever had "eaten" were by a car stereo, and that was maybe two of them out of hundreds of cassettes across many years.

  • @plunkervillerr1529
    @plunkervillerr1529 2 года назад +1

    I `m 74 and I`ve been transfering my LPs and 45s on to cassette since the early 1970s .I could record only my most favorite songs and play back in my car .Some of those high grade cassettes are still working fine . Brand names like Maxell, Scotch High Lander , Memorx , and Sony . I have that same recorder that your using SONY model TC--W411. Friends love my taste in music , so I generate copies for them only to find that they have no playbacks . YOUR`s is a fantastic sight , thank you .