Posted on 08/17/2024 1:53:57 AM PDT by libh8er
Those are correct observations . Cuz that.. Cassette tapes have ruined many a tape player .
I always found Bic pens much better for that.
Anyone remember the more advanced cassette players that would stop at the beginning of a song if you were rewinding or fast-forwarding? Lots of them were featured in car cassette players, presumably to minimize driver distraction.
I’ve been going through some of my old cassette tapes (some over 30+ years). Much to my surprise, some of them still play. I even have an old mini-system I still use. CD/Tape/AM/FM. It’s a Panasonic. I’ve had it for 20 years or so.
ROTF! Cassette revival??? This is the first I’ve heard of this. What is it with younger generations embracing outdated technology?
When do Model T’s with hand cranked starters come out. I can’t wait to get one of those! I so look forward to having to vigorously crank that sucker every time I want to go anywhere - and run the real risk of breaking one of my arms while doing so!
I miss Reel-To-Reel tapes.
“I miss Reel-To-Reel tapes.”
Me, too. I had an excellent Teac reel-to-reel that I schlepped around every time I relocated. It was heavy as a car, I think. When I moved to HI, I had to let it go. 😢
What’s a pencil?
First vinyl was selling again and now cassettes. There also was a boom in Polaroid type cameras and in fact Polaroid reissued some of their cameras and even started making the film cartridges again. Gen Z is on a quest for authentic experiences and somehow the cassettes craze fits into that.
Because they are so original—but couldn’t revive records since the Millennials already did that.
What’s next after them, 8-tracks?
And they were nothing if you didn’t have a beautiful, 8-foot, wooden console for your whole system!
I drive our old Buick around town and it has a cassette player. And just like I didn’t get rid of the Buick, I didn’t get rid of my cassettes. Much to my wife’s dismay.
Hmm - growing up on cassettes, perhaps that is why even with CD’s (or gasp - even music lists on my phone), I still almost always listen to the entire album the way the group wanted me to hear it. Very rarely do I skip over a song - and usually because it has been overplayed on the radio, not because it sucks. (And sometimes they are bad!)
I remember eight-tracks. They would interrupt a song to switch tracks.
I remember when Quadrophonic Eight-Tracks were a thing.
Growing up playing an instrument to songs was rough. First it was lift and drop a needle on an LP to replay the same song over, then rewinding reel to reels, then fast forwarding 8 tracks all the way through back to the beginning of that song again, then reversing cassettes to replay the song again. Kids now days got it easy, just loop a digital track.
Just lift the needle and place it in the correct Grove.
Or is that a little to “Old School”?
“I remember when Quadrophonic Eight-Tracks were a thing.”
I do too and it was an incredible audio experience! It had “presence” like surround sound. I have often wondered why this audio experience has not been revived and replicated as a true four channel standard rather than just the two channel standard now that digital has unlimited tracks and output channel division capability.
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