![]() The additional tracks allowed different parts to be added to the recording at different times. When EMI started using 4-track tape machines at their Abbey Road Studios in 1963, a greater degree of freedom entered the recording process. Stereo versions were also produced at the request of the record label, but these were of secondary importance to the producer George Martin, who delegated the task to other engineers. But since most radio broadcast and portable record players only supported mono reproduction, all of the Beatles records were primarily mixed down to mono. For example, the early mostly ‘live’ recordings found in early Beatles recordings were recorded using several microphones all mixed down to a two track tape machine. The expansion from mono through 2, 4, 8, 16 and up to 24 tracks over the course of the late 1950s to 1970s allowed the development of recording and production techniques (and beyond that via the synchronising of multiple tape machines even 48 tracks were common). These complex machines are capable of reproducing high-quality sound for each track and they represent the pinnacle of analogue multitrack tape recorders.įigure 12 A 24-track analogue tape recorder ![]() Figure 12 shows a professional 24-track analogue tape recorder using special 5 cm (2 inch) wide tape. By also widening the tape, even more tracks could be incorporated, so allowing individual instruments to be recorded on separate tracks for down-mixing at a later date. As technology advanced, more tracks were able to be added. Rather than doubling the tape width, a decision was made to halve the track width by incorporating two discrete heads one above the other in a single head assembly. Stereo needed two tracks – one for each channel. Initially, the full width of the standard quarter-inch tape was used for making monophonic recordings. ![]() ![]() From its development until the late 1970s, the tape recorder was at the heart of the professional music recording studio. The importance of tape recording to record production cannot be overemphasised. ![]()
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