[peel] Re: 60s-70s Peel Shows - The Decktician Tapes

rockerq@... rockerq@...
Sun Oct 10 17:49:25 CEST 2010


Hi - On Friday I took possesion of 40 - 50 1/4 inch reels dating from the 
late 60s & early 70s, as what I will call "The Decktician Tapes" - Enjoyed a 
pleasant pub lunch with our generous listmember, who uses that name when 
DJing.

Not sure if there will be many complete shows, I think some of the material 
will be edited highlights of shows, but hopefully there should be some 
entire sections of shows at least. Not yet had the chance to listen to any - 
will need to dig my 1/4 inch machine out of the spare room & set it up, so 
unsure what sort of quality these recordings will be - but of course we have 
virtually nothing from this era, so anything bar a blank tape will be a 
valuable addition to our archives.

Could anyone who wishes to be part of the ripping team please message me 
offlist? You will need a 1/4 inch 1/4 track (ie stereo in either direction) 
machine - all reels are 7" or smaller - and some way of converting the 
analogue signal to digital - a digital recorder / CDr audio recorder / soundcard 
equipped PC / a Mac.

Of almost as much interest as the tapes themselves are the accompanying 
small pile of excercise books, which are packed with carefully handwritten 
tracklistings of many many Peel shows, which may or may not correspond to the 
content of the tapes.

Particularly with this era we are unlikely to turn up many actual tapes of 
shows, so written documentation like this may be the closest we get to some 
of these shows - should be fascinating!

Does anyone have the necessary scanning / OCR capability / skill to 
digitize this kind of thing?

Cheers!

Rocker

PS the reason I am only just now posting about this is that I spent all of 
yesterday at the World International John Peel Day event at Bloomington 
Lanes, in North London. Did anyone else here go? The event was a spectacular 
success, we had around 1000 people through the door all day, raised around 
£2.5k for the DEC charity. The first band was on at 2pm, and I ended up DJing 
back to back with Sean Fortuna Pop after the bands finished at midnight, 
playing Peel classics (as well as Peel obscurities!) ending at 02:45 with Teenage 
Kicks and Love will Tear Us Apart.

Highlights for me were my friends Horowitz getting the first noise 
complaints of the day for their feedback-guitar driven set at 3 in the afternoon - 
from a hen party! (they are now toying with the idea of calling their next LP 
"Hen Party Classics"); Laetitia Sadier playing a DJ set of krautrock and 
obscure soundtrack-type stuff; and playing Lil Louis' "French Kiss" to a 
roomful of indie kids at 2.30am and watching them try to dance through the 
orgasmic breakdown in the middle.

Got home to Bristol at 04:45 - I love the M4 at that time of night!




> <<Just to echo others and say many thanks indeed to our fellow list 
> member for coming forward with this fantastic offer. It sounds like an amazing 
> collection.
> 
> Perhaps might suggest that if there are several people with equipment 
> scattered around the UK, we could take up Rocker's kind offer for him to again 
> act as central controller - despite the pressing demands on his time and 
> bedroom space.
> 
> In the meantime, many thanks to Rocker, Steve in Korea and everyone else 
> for sharing so many Peel shows spanning the decades. Like others, have been 
> especially enjoying the recent late 70s ones, so greatly appreciate the 
> efforts of Doc Mango and Stuart on those.
> 
> Cheers,
> 
> SW>>


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