On Fri, 6 Apr 2012 06:58:35 -0700, Mike Rivers wrote
(in article <jlmsqc$k9i$
1...@dont-email.me>):
> Well, check again. They're building a digital archive (it'll
> take another 50 years) and it's backed up and backed up and
> backed up. The facility is darn safe, too. It's really quite
> amazing, Next time you're in Culpepper VA you should take a
> tour.
>------------------------------<snip>------------------------------<
Yeah, I casually know Pat Kennedy, who is their resident film scanning tech
and colorist on staff in Virginia. Pat's a great guy who does exceptional
work, and I have no doubt they're doing everything they can to hang on to
what they've got.
> Some, maybe, but not anybody. How many things do you have
> that you really, really, care about? What would be the
> effect on your life should you lose a recording or a TV
> show? And do you even KNOW everything you have?
>------------------------------<snip>------------------------------<
Even getting the important Top 10 hit TV shows of (say) the last 30 years
digitally archived is on the back burner of many studios. Almost none of the
film shows are being done at 4K, with the exception of SEINFELD and a few
others. And the videotape shows are really, really falling apart quickly.
> Now don't get me wrong. I'm not one of these "music is
> temporary" people. I have some things that I enjoy listening
> to several times over a decade. But I wouldn't cry if a CD
> or DAT would no longer play. Not unless it was my job to
> preserve it for eternity.
>------------------------------<snip>------------------------------<
Nobody knows how many master tapes Universal lost in the studio fire three
years ago. Their official statement at the time was, "well, everything
important has already been released." But you have to wonder, what about all
the other stuff that wasn't considered important: B-sides, album tracks,
alternate takes, live performances... there's tons of stuff that isn't
necessarily "hit" material that deserves to be saved.
There are rumors that all of Bing Crosby's masters were lost, along with
Ricky Nelson and scores of others. Granted, the mastered CDs survive -- as
CDs -- but it's still sad if the analog master tapes are gone forever. And I
wouldn't consider, say, a 1984-1985 CD to sound as good as that tape could
ever sound, given the issues with A/D converters and digital recording in
that era.
--MFW