The Victrola is 78 RPM, kinda hard to listen to "modern music";.But it entertained my great grand parents, hence the "retention" of the device.We had a Motorola HiFi too, spun my "Meet the Beatles" on it in mono too.I don't understand why so many people still want vinyl, not much channel seperation or dynamic range there.And I'm also a trained audio engineer and piano tuner, so no "tin ear" here.TonySent: Tuesday, December 28, 2010 3:29 PMSubject: Re: [newmellotrongroup] Mellotronics M3000 HD for iPad
Cool. I still have my parents' old Motorola HiFi. Mono... Excellent for listening to early Beatles and Beach Boys records. I haven9;t used it in 25 years.In a message dated 12/28/2010 2:50:58 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, atm655@verizon.net writes:
I have a Victrola, been in the family for a very long time, and it looks and works fine.Not for sale at any price.Tony----- Original Message -----From: lsf5275@aol.comSent: Tuesday, December 28, 2010 2:08 PMSubject: Re: [newmellotrongroup] Mellotronics M3000 HD for iPad
Does your HiFi include a Victrola? ;-)In a message dated 12/28/2010 1:09:41 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, tronbros@aol.com writes:We have put the iPad through our standard hifi system and it sound amazing - especially our app! Serously, the audio is first class.
Message
Re: [newmellotrongroup] Mellotronics M3000 HD for iPad
2010-12-29 by Chris Dale
No Victrola, but my friend might have one I could buy. Not sure what they go for.
I do have an original Transcriptors Hydraulic Reference Turntable though. Looks beautiful and sounds great.
I prefer vinyl if the music was recorded in that era. I also have a Fleetwood / Weltron space helmet 8 track player for listening to the alternate mixes of Beatles / Floyd etc. You can see one in the first Austin Powers movie next to the spinning bed.
Yeah baby yeah!
On Tue, Dec 28, 2010 at 3:47 PM, Tony <atm655@verizon.net> wrote:
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