Yes, 50 years ago, vinyl was king; some say it still is. Â But for me, playing records on my low-cost Garrard TT (Shure M91 ED or an Empire cart. I liked even more) through a Pioneer SX626 receiver, was not that great. Â Yes, I used the Discwasher, but that couldnât keep up with the partying and carelessness that I was doing back then. Â The best sound I got was from the Sony 7â RTR I had. Â I donât know if the Pioneer had a better tape section or it was the turntable/cart/debris, but the sound was definitely better from tape.
Another cool option with the Sony was recording music from the radio. Â Back then, there was a University of Dayton (OH)-owned station, WVUD. Â They played the popular hits but also sprinkled in some music not heard on the strictly commercial stations. Â The coolest was a program from 7-8 PM M-F called âWax Museumâ, when they would play an entire album for the audience to record. Â The program began with a tone, so you could set your recording level. Â Before the music would begin, that same tone would sound, alerting you to start recording; then before the commercials, the tone would sound again so you could stop recording. Â There were four roughly 12-13 minute segments for recording, and then you had the entire album. Â Sometimes VUD staff would edit the tunes so that one would fade into the other, which was cool when two songs really blended well. Â Alas, the university sold the station to a commercial interest and that was that. Â But for several years during the 1970âs, I had my tape ready to record albums. Â It was awesome while it lasted.
For those of you familiar with WLW AM 700 in Cincinnati, long-time talk host Mike McConnell (who also spent a few years in Chicago before returning to WLW) started his DJ-ing career at WVUD during the 1970âs. Â McConnell is currently the early morning DJ at WLW.