[net.records] Ramblings on taping records

mem (12/20/82)

c
I just read a paragraph from a record catalog which says, in part..
"Please refrain from home-taping records by artists on independant
labels.  ...it is economically detrimental to artists and small
companies who are already having a difficult time surviving this
economy ... If you need cassettes for your car, please buy pre-recorded
cassettes... We hope you'll think about who profits (blank cassette
manufacturers) and who loses (performing artists and independant
companies)..."

I, personally, have never gone in much for taping other people's records.
Not really out of respect for the artists, but because I have this flaw
in my outlook that wants to own the material I like.

However I have made it a practice to record ALL of my albums on tape.  This
in order to save my records, and so I can listen to an album all the way
through without having to get up and turn it over.  Lazy, wot?  Not to
mention being able to take them in my car.  There was a time when I bought
pre-recorded tapes (not having a turntable), but I never did see one
of these things of a quality above the throw-in-the-trash level.  And,
not all albums are on tape to begin with; plus when the tape gets old
or eaten, what is the chance that another one will still be available.

Mark Mallett