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Went to my local record store for Record Store Day today and while it wasn't one of the Record Store Day exclusive releases, I was thrilled to find Beyonce's Lemonade, an album I've wanted for quite some time. Fantastic album and the vinyl for it looks so good!
Photo-a-Day: Year 15, Day 112 - Total Days: 5225
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Pohnpei, Federated States of Micronesia
Hasselblad 500 C/M, Carl Zeiss Planar 80mm f/2.8 C T*, Fuji Pro 400H, 10mm Hasselblad Extension Tube, Heliopan 3x Closeup Filter
An affordable MM cartridge with relatively high output. A cheap upgrade option for vintage turntables. Terrific mids.
It's Record Store Day in America, and since I can't make it to one, or that many have closed their doors, I thought I would add another to my Album & Song Series of photos. This is one of my favorite albums of all-time, and I bought this vinyl LP over 20 years ago for 10 cents. It is over 60 years old and sounds brand new to this day.
"Hey there cutes, put on your dancin' boots and come dance with me."
That is the opening line from Frank Sinatra's incredible 1959 album, "Come Dance With Me!," with orchestration and arrangements by Billy May. One of Frank's best albums, by far, and it displays everything great about the classic crooner. From his vocal range, to his signature ring-a-ding, cuckoo, swingin' lingo, this album has it all. Every song is terrific Frank, and you can just tell he was at the very top of his game with this record.
It comes at the end of an amazing streak of albums with Capitol Records, just before he leaves to start his own Reprise Records in 1960. "Come Dance With Me!" won the Grammy Award for Album of the Year, Best Vocal Performance, and Best Arrangement (for Billy May.)
The songlist is incredible, with so many standard hits, such as "Cheek to Cheek," "Day In, Day Out," "The Last Dance," the title track, and "Something's Gotta Give."
My favorite song on the album is "Saturday Night." Just listen to that horn section! So, on this gas of a Saturday, give this record a spin. Grab your girl, your guy, a hatrack, your Swiffer Sweeper, a large dog, or whatever you like to dance with, and create a swingin' place of your own.
And Derek, I'm sure you and Iwona have danced to this album a few times. Enjoy!
Side 1
Come Dance With Me
Something's Gotta Give
Just In Time
Dancing in the Dark
Too Close for Comfort
I Could Have Danced All Night
Side 2
Saturday Night
Day In, Day Out
Cheek To Cheek
Baubles, Bangles and Beads
The Song Is You
The Last Dance
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Photo by Olympus E-PL7 + Voigtlander NOKTON 25mm f/0.95
Translucent Green Lindsey Stirling eponymous LP 33 RPM vinyl on an Audio-Technica turntable.
Photography by J. David Buerk:
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Presonus StudioLive AR12 USB Mixer/USB interface
Audio Technica LP120 USB turntable
Underwood Typewriter
TheJTL/Jason T. Lewis Workspace Early 2017
This is my new gaming/streaming/video editing/audio recording setup. I have it rigged as triple monitor Mac/PC Swiss Army knife. I have the PC, Mac and PS4 connected to the Elgato HD60 capture card and a 4-channel HDMI switcher. I can basically do anything I need to from this one workstation.
Desk:
Butcher block countertop (96 inches)
2 Gray IKEA Alex Drawer Units
3 27" Asus MX279H 1080p IPS Monitors
Blue yeti USB Mic Blackout Edition
Razer Black Widow Chroma Tournament Edition
Razer Mamba Chroma Wireless Mouse
PS4 (OG) with Nico Databank (1TB 7200rpm HD)
Astro A50 Gen 3 (hiding behind the PS4)
Tannoy Reveal 802 Studio Monitors
No-name black extended mousepad
Mac Pro keyboard and mouse:
Logitech G710
Logitech Trackball
PC:
Anidees AI Crystal Mid-tower PC Case
Intel i7 6700K
Nvidia GTX 1080 Founders Edition
16GB Corsair Vengeance RAM
Gigabyte Z170 HDP-3 Motherboard
Corsair H100i v2 water-cooling radiator
Corsair 850 watt power supply
Soundblaster ZX soundcard
Elgato HD60 capture card
Mac Pro (for audio recording):
2006 model
16GB RAM
2 Xeon 2.66mhz processors
256gb SSD system drive
250GB work drive
1TB work drive
Upgraded to run Mac OX El Capitain
Misc:
Presonus StudioLive AR12 USB audio mixer and interface
Sennheiser HD600 reference headphones
Sony Platinum Wireless Gaming Headset (current unit up for review)
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Photo by Olympus EM5MK2 EM5MKII + Zonlai 25mm f/1.8
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audio-technica AT-20 SLa
Grace 707
Transcriptor Skeleton
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NEX-6 + Carl Zeiss Planar 1.4/50; f1.4 (handheld)
Stroboscopic speed indicator on Audio Technica turntable while playing a 45 RPM record. When the dots along the edge of the platter look to be standing still the speed is correct.
Can't you hear it ? The sonorous Wurlitzer noodling of Korla Pandit, object of desire for many octogenarian housewives of Southern California. Not on 180 Vinyl but clean PVC from Fantasy Records. Saul Can't Dance, but he can stamp records. The disc appears to be a Promo from a radio station near Redwood City, California personalized to DJ named Bill, from a musician known as "Korla Pandit". FYI; The JVC turntable is a recycled toss out, the Audio Technica Magnet Phono Cartridge is the original.
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Photo by Olympus PEN-F PENF + Olympus 25mm f/1.2 Pro
I do remember these old vinyl discs,we used to have one in our home sometime , before i was born i guess, and all that was left of it for me to see was a broken horn and some rusted tin of unused needles.
i have kept the title nostalgia , cause i think the photo conveys a feeling of living in the old times.
The connection to gramophone in kolkata goes backa long way in history.First gramophone record in India was made in Kolkata in 1898. In 1877, Thomas Edison invented a sound machine which he called phonograph. Hemendra Mohan Bose, an Indian entrepreneur, imported the phonograph of Edison and made the cylinder record. The records were popularly known as Bose's record. Rabindranath Tagore recorded the 'Bande Mataram' here in his own voice.The Gramophone & Typewriter Ltd recorded the first Indian song in their Beliaghata factory in 1898. There are different opinions about the recorded song of the first professional singer. The inventor of disc record, Frederick Gaiesburg of Germany, arrived in Calcutta on 27th October, 1902 to record the songs of the native singers. His desire was to send these records to Hanoever, make them into discs and then sell them in Calcutta. He is said to have gone to a theatre hall on 5th November, 1902, and recorded the songs of Gauher Jaan.
2002 was an important year because it was the centenary of the cutting of the first gramophone recording of Hindustani music, in Kolkata, in 1902.2008 marked the centenary of an event of far-reaching impact on Indian music—the setting up of the first record factory once again in Kolkata in 1908.
Today, as technology makes it possible for us to record ourselves on devices as small and user-friendly as mobile phones, it may be difficult for any of us to even imagine the challenges and difficulties that both recording engineers and artistes must have faced a century ago. The man who led what was known as the first recording expedition to India in 1902 was Frederick William Gaisberg. Assisted by George Dillnutt, he made the first “native” recordings on Saturday, 8 November 1902. Kinnear quotes from Gaisberg’s diary a description of “two little nautch (dancing) girls aged fourteen and sixteen with miserable voices”. Called Miss Soshi Mukhi and Miss Fani Bala, both artistes from the repertory of the Classic Theatre, they recorded songs in Bangla as well as in Hindi.
furthur information can be accessed in
I tend to throw my music player on my bed when I get home...and he just crawled in there. I'm not really sure if he even likes music. As for Staedtler...well...he's deaf, LOL.
Sigma 50mm 1.4 DG HSM
ISO: 100
Av: f/3.5
Tv: 1/350 (430EX flash: ceiling bounce)
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Olympus MZD 17mm f/1.2 PRO Review
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Panasonic LEICA DG 12mm f/1.4 Review
Panasonic LEICA DG 8-18mm f/2.8-4 Review
A Five-Year Photographic Journey with the M4/3 Series.
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All of My Reviews|心得文:
Olympus MZD 17mm f/1.2 PRO Review
Olympus MZD 25mm f/1.2 PRO Review
Olympus MZD 45mm f/1.2 PRO Review
Panasonic LEICA DG 12mm f/1.4 Review
Panasonic LEICA DG 8-18mm f/2.8-4 Review
A Five-Year Photographic Journey with the M4/3 Series.