Showing posts with label Philips Records. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Philips Records. Show all posts

April 6, 2018

1,001 LaserDiscs 1: In the beginning

      
     



 





  

     
     The LaserDisc came on the scene 40 years ago . . . .   


                                       Jaws LaserDisc      
  

I have a collection of LaserDiscs that I will be selling, so, I decided to start a series on the discs I have in my collection.           
          
The LaserDisc (abbreviated as LD) is a home video format and the first commercial optical disc storage medium, initially licensed, sold and marketed as MCA DiscoVision in North America in 1978.         
 
Although the format was capable of offering higher-quality video and audio than its consumer rivals, VHS and Betamax videotape, the LaserDisc never managed to gain widespread use in North America, largely due to high costs for the players and video titles themselves and the inability to record TV programs.

Optical video recording technology, using a transparent disc, was invented by David Paul Gregg and James Russell in 1958 (and patented in 1961 and 1990). The Gregg patents were purchased by MCA in 1968. By 1969, Philips had developed a videodisc in reflective mode, which has advantages over the transparent mode. MCA and Philips then decided to combine their efforts and first publicly demonstrated the video disc in 1972.      

The format was first available on the market, in Atlanta, Georgia, in 1978, two years after the introduction of the VHS VCR, and four years before the introduction of the CD (which is based on laser disc technology). Initially licensed, sold, and marketed as MCA DiscoVision (also known as simply "DiscoVision") in North America in 1978, the technology was previously referred to internally as Optical Videodisc System, Reflective Optical Videodisc, Laser Optical Videodisc, and Disco-Vision (with a dash), with the first players referring to the format as "Video Long Play". The first LaserDisc title marketed in North America was the MCA DiscoVision release of Jaws.      

Pioneer Electronics purchased the majority stake in the format and marketed it as both LaserVision (format name) and LaserDisc (brand name) in 1980, with some releases unofficially referring to the medium as "Laser Videodisc". Philips produced the players while MCA produced the discs.


Pioneer LaserDisc player    


The Philips-MCA cooperation was not successful, and discontinued after a few years. Several of the scientists responsible for the early research (Richard Wilkinson, Ray Dakin and John Winslow) founded Optical Disc Corporation (now ODC Nimbus).   

In 1984, Sony introduced a LaserDisc format that could store any form of digital data, as a data storage device similar to CD-ROM, with a large capacity 3.28 GiB, comparable to the later DVD-ROM format.   

The standard home video LaserDisc was 30 cm (12 in) in diameter and made up of two single-sided aluminum discs layered in plastic. Although appearing similar to compact discs or DVDs, LaserDisc used analog video stored in the composite domain (having a video bandwidth approximately equivalent to the 1-inch (25 mm) C-Type VTR format) with analog FM stereo sound and PCM digital audio. The LaserDisc at its most fundamental level was still recorded as a series of pits and lands much like CDs, DVDs, and even Blu-ray Discs are today. However, while the encoding is of a binary nature, the information is encoded as analog pulse-width modulation with a 50% duty cycle, where the information is contained in the lengths and spacing of the pits.


disk storage comparison

  
By the early 2000s, LaserDisc was completely replaced by the DVD in the North American retail marketplace, as neither players nor software were then produced. Players were still exported to North America from Japan until the end of 2001. The format has retained some popularity among American collectors, and to a greater degree in Japan, where the format was better supported and more prevalent during its life. In Europe, LaserDisc always remained an obscure format.       


     
Net links:         
   
LaserDisc formats   
LaserDisc sizes  
       
    
    
Styrous® ~ Friday, April 6, 2018          



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November 22, 2013

20,000 Vinyl LPs 28: John Fitzgerald Kennedy ~ That Was the Week That Was


Any one who was more than 5 years old on this date fifty years ago, November 22, 1963, knows exactly where they were and what they were doing. I vividly remember where I was and the circumstances. I had an alarm-clock radio that would wake me up with gentle music in the mornings to go to work. It came on that morning not with music, as usual, but with a news bulletin announcing the shooting of President John Fitzgerald Kennedy, in Dallas, Texas. I remember the shock and horror of the news and the surreal feeling I was still sleeping and I was having a nightmare I couldn't wake up from. I just couldn't believe it was true. But the horrible truth was, I was not sleeping and the nightmare was real. The bizarre thing is, almost five years later, on June 7, 1968, that same alarm-clock radio woke me up to the news of the assassination of Robert Francis Kennedy the night before. It was a hideous déjà vu I never wanted repeated so I threw the alarm-clock radio away and used a regular alarm clock from then on.

Kennedy was a hero to me as he was to many of us in those times. The date is marked in American history, and for the world, as one of the saddest days in modern times. The shock of the event can still be felt after 50 years.



This album is a recording of a broadcast of the BBC weekly political satire program, That Was the Week That Was; this night it was not a humorous or satirical show but a tribute to the life of John Fitzgerald Kennedy with readings and musings by various famous people (tracklist below). It was broadcast the day after the assassination, November 23, 1963. The usual humorous bantering was absent from it. It was a shortened 20-minute program with no satire, reflecting on the loss, including a contribution from Dame Sybil Thorndike and the tribute song In the Summer of His Years sung by Millicent Martin with music by David Lee and lyrics by Herbert Kretzmer. This edition was screened on NBC in the US the following day, and the soundtrack was released by Decca Records ‎– DL 9116. There must have been millions of copies of the album sold.

Mahalia Jackson sings a moving a-capella version of In the Summer of His Years with drums accompanying her vocal (link below).

A studio recording of In the Summer of His Years, by Millicent Martin, was issued in the US by ABC-Paramount, other versions were recorded and released by Toni Arden (a 7" 45 rpm single on Decca), Bobby Rydell, Connie Francis (MGM), Mahalia Jackson (Columbia), Kate Smith (RCA Victor), Sarah Vaughan (Vernon), Hettie Palance and The Chad Mitchell Trio (Mercury); the Francis recording became a Top 40 hit on the Cash Box pop singles chart in January 1964 (links to music on YouTube below).


photos by Lewis Morley Studios


      The BBC Telecast Saturday November 23, 1963
      In Order Of Appearance
    David Frost        
    Roy Kinnear        
    David Kernan        
    Al Mancini        
    Kenneth Cope        
    William (Willie) Rushton        
    Lance Percicent        
     David Frost        
Millicent MartinIn The Summer Of His Years        
    David Frost        
    Robert Lang        
Dame Sybil Thorndike* – To Jackie        
    Bernard Levin        
    David Frost



photos by Lewis Morley Studios




photos by Lewis Morley Studios













TW3 - Death of President Kennedy with Millicent Martin singing, In The Summer Of His Years, on YouTube

In The Summer of His Years by Mahalia Jackson on YouTube
In The Summer of His Years by Kate Smith on YouTube

there is another John Fitzgerald Kennedy article on the Viewfinder

 

Where were you?



Styrous ~ November 22, 2013

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