
by don campau
Dig this. People always complain bitterly about the sound of
mp3s. Microcassette recordings transferred to mp3 sound great!
There's something about the two that makes them a natural match.
In many ways the mp3-ized microcassette recordings sound better
than the original microcassette recordings on which they are
based! Seriously!
I would like to share with you what I consider to be my very
best recorded work, The Man With The Tape Recorder. It was
recorded totally on microcassette - all edits were done in the
recorder - with no outside edits. I originally released it on
CDR. It now lives totally online:
To contribute to the Dictaphonia Microcassette Compilation
project send a 5-minute recording on a microcassette to:
Hal McGee
1909 SW 42nd Way
Apt. E
Gainesville, FL
32607
USA
More info on Dictaphonia here:

Feature Article
Hal McGee
thoughts on microcassettes, Dictaphonia, and those nasty mean little tapes
February 2010 Sunday, January 24, 2010 at 8:25am Back in the 1980s I was one of the people who spearheaded the
original wave of interest in cassettes as a legitimate audio art form
and format. The Golden Age of Cassette Culture! And this wasn't just
people doing mix tapes. These were fully-realized experimental music
audioworks, with a highly personal and idiosyncratic feeling and sound
to them, and often with homemade packaging. In the mid-80s I operated
with Debbie Jaffe the Cause And Effect Distributon Service and label and
in three years we sold and traded 5,000+ cassettes of homemade
experimental music from all over Planet Earth. You can see a list of my
own early stuff from the 80s plus even download many of those original
cassette albums here: I know about all of the work that's been done by turntablists,
locked-groove people, Christian Marclay, Milan Knížák, etc., but a vinyl
record is basically non-interactive. It's meant for listening to, being
an audience to what someone else has done. The same with CDs and CDRs,
which are worse and more boring from an artistic standpoint than vinyl.
http://www.halmcgee.com/Music/
I released all of my work on cassette up until about 1998. From about
2000 until roughly 2005-6 I released all of my new experimental music on
CDRs and a few CD releases.
From about 2006 onward I stopped releasing my music in physical formats
(tapes, discs) and released all of my stuff online on my web site,
halmcgee.com. Online music was to me the perfect and logical extension
of what we were doing with our homemade cassette releases back in the
80s. Open access democratic anarchy. Anybody with a computer and an
internet connection had free access to my music. I have generally in
recent years offered all of my music for free. My downloads have always
been free.
A couple of years ago I encountered a lot of resistance to and downright
hostility toward online music in discussions on the Noise discussion
boards. There were endless and highly-detailed complaints about the
shitty sound quality of mp3s and about how online music wasn't genuine
enough. Many people still wanted to have a physical object to hold in
their hands with printed artwork, something tangible and "real". People
20-30 years younger than me were resisting what I saw as natural
"progress" - online music - and were, in my mind, regressing somewhat by
insisting on physical container audio formats. I think that it was natural for me and people of my age
group to pass through the stages that I did, because we started making
our homemade music at a time that was pre-computer, pre-internet,
pre-email, pre-MySpace and pre-Facebook. We handwrote letters, dubbed
tapes, went to Kinko's and printed tape covers, packaged up the tapes,
went to the post office and mailed them, etc. For people much younger
than me, whose lives have essentially always been mediated by digital
culture... I think that they are looking for authenticity, for genuine
experiences, and in some ways I think they see online anything as
drudgery, as work-related, as something that doesn't connect them to
other people, but as something that is distancing and cold.
I must say, that as much as admire the general spirit of todays'
cassette resurgence, I also take a dim view of it. To me it's like
reaching for something that isn't really there any more. And much of
what I see in today's cassette labels is a sort of preciousness, a
fetishistic clinging to physical objects almost as if they are totemic
magical devices. Many of these labels produce their releases in
ridiculously limited editions, which just increases the fetishism.
So why did I start a microcassette label? There are many reasons.
You can actually interact with a cassette, change it, erase the original
contents, insert your own content. Aside from scratching and altering a
vinyl record there's not a whole lot that you can do with a vinyl
record.
There's an essential difference here.
Like I said above, a cassette, standard or micro-, offers/invites
interaction and open-ended creation. It's an empty container that awaits
you, me, anybody, everybody. It breaks down the false barrier between
artist and audience. Everyone can be an artist.
Why did I choose to release microcassettes? Lots of reasons.
Let's start with a basic one.
I think they sound great. They have a limited frequency response,
usually about 400 Hz to 4000 Hz, which by design, matches the range of
the human voice. So, they seem very human to me in their sound. The
sound is hyper-compressed, and if one doesn't clutter the tape with too
many sounds at once it can have a startling clarity and directness. The
sound on a microcassette is very focused. It is what it is, right there,
there it is.
Also, they are monophonic - no bothering with stereo sound! - who needs
it?