Edit Produced for BUFI - the British Underground Feature Initiative teaching the basics to enable proficient #frugalwave movie making. Knowledge is confidence.
It somewhat explained well, but still don't get it.. If we create a Human size disk, can we carved it to the disk? Like normal wood carving and turn it to a sound?? Because a sound that turns to a carved in a wall doesnt make sense to me.
Hey, so we need to remember that sound is a wave that propagate thru air or water or solid etc, so it needs something to propagate (that's why there is no sound in vacuum), so the waves have a wavelenght, a frequency, etc... you can think of air vibrating with a certain frequence. Same thing in the vinyl, the tip vibrates at a certain frequence that is, thanks to speakers, converted into air vibration that makes sound
Usually on tape with multiple tracks - if there are more than two then they are mixed down to two. The tracks are then put on the record. At least that's what I know.
Who and when has recorded this video originally? The speaker is obviously American. Since the ratio is not 4:3/5:4, this means this was an educational short for cinema theatres? Was it shown before regular feature films as an advertisement or just for educational purposes?
Maybe stylus and pickups have changed some since then. Still explains if somewhat over dramatically how you get stereo from one groove. Its a two sided groove, a V if you will.
this is a better explanation how vinyl record players work, than the sorry ass modern shit explanations we got today
I've wonder about this for... maybe decades, and today was the day I decided to look up.
Incredibly smart. I would never have guessed.
that’s smart
Wicked shmaht
But why did you have to put music over the explanation? :/
"You are going on a ride!"
Mesmerising
It somewhat explained well, but still don't get it.. If we create a Human size disk, can we carved it to the disk? Like normal wood carving and turn it to a sound??
Because a sound that turns to a carved in a wall doesnt make sense to me.
maybe this answers your question (and the answer is yes) th-cam.com/video/XukLEaMbm9k/w-d-xo.html
Hey, so we need to remember that sound is a wave that propagate thru air or water or solid etc, so it needs something to propagate (that's why there is no sound in vacuum), so the waves have a wavelenght, a frequency, etc... you can think of air vibrating with a certain frequence. Same thing in the vinyl, the tip vibrates at a certain frequence that is, thanks to speakers, converted into air vibration that makes sound
Now how are stereo LPs recorded?
Usually on tape with multiple tracks - if there are more than two then they are mixed down to two. The tracks are then put on the record. At least that's what I know.
Amazing
any recognize the phrase oliver heldens sampled
which song
Its magic
Minecraft music.
Erik Satie, Gymnopédie no1 ;)
Who and when has recorded this video originally? The speaker is obviously American. Since the ratio is not 4:3/5:4, this means this was an educational short for cinema theatres? Was it shown before regular feature films as an advertisement or just for educational purposes?
It might be cropped.
Maybe stylus and pickups have changed some since then. Still explains if somewhat over dramatically how you get stereo from one groove. Its a two sided groove, a V if you will.
LIKOS
Weed