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I loved cassettes back in their day, but I thought that day was gone. But now comes word that the much hyped new Taylor Swift LP will be coming out not only on vinyl but also on cassette. Why? Turns out this throwback to a different time is increasing in popularity amongst a modern generation, who seem to love old tech.
Where they're finding the machines to play them is another story.
Taylor Swift’s new album comes on cassette. Who is buying those?
Which reminds me, I still have some old unopened cassettes upstairs somewhere. They're decades old and still in their shrink wrapping. I wonder if they'd still work?
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RA, I have cassettes that I recorded and factory ones as well, mostly from the 80s but a couple from the 70s, and they all still play well. In fact, I listened to one factory tape from 1970 and it played great. So your tapes should be fine if you stored them properly, (cool dry space etc.). Finding a player becomes the challenge but still doable.
Also, cassettes are somewhat collectible these days, especially sealed ones, just saying!
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I have a great Pioneer dual deck dubbing cassette machine which I bought many years ago. I'm pretty sure it still works, although I wouldn't want to be anchored to that in my house.
The great thing about cassettes is their portability. I still have a few old long unused Walkmans upstairs somewhere. Some of them might actually still work.
But I still think my not-quite-as-ancient MP3 player is a lot more convenient, if that's the route I'm going to take!
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Yeah, the hipster record stores have been carrying new and used cassettes for a few years now. Shitty sound quality makes a comeback!
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Chrisphen wrote:
Yeah, the hipster record stores have been carrying new and used cassettes for a few years now. Shitty sound quality makes a comeback!
I never cared for the sound of pre-recorded cassettes, either. I always thought they had kind of a "freeze-dried" quality, with maybe the exception of those distributed by CBS Records (now Sony Music) back in the '80s, which were dubbed onto chrome cassettes. Vinyl was my format of choice until I could afford a CD player.
Now watch the record companies retail the price of cassettes around the $30-$40 mark like they did with vinyl records a few years back, hoping people will appreciate the "nice, warm sound" of ferric oxide.
PJ
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Cassettes had the luxury of portability in an age where portability was rare - but still limited to 120 minutes of music. The 10,000 or so songs stored on the microSD card in my phone matches the portability and far outstrips the capacity of a cassette.
Anybody unironically buying a cassette in 2025 is doing so to be trendy. No different than those ridiculously over-sized sippy-cup Stanley mugs.
Last edited by Binson Echorec (Yesterday 10:29 am)
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Binson Echorec wrote:
Cassettes had the luxury of portability in an age where portability was rare - but still limited to 120 minutes of music. The 10,000 or so songs stored on the microSD card in my phone matches the portability and far outstrips the capacity of a cassette.
Anybody unironically buying a cassette in 2025 is doing so to be trendy. No different than those ridiculously over-sized sippy-cup Stanley mugs.
I admit that I liked cassette for the car. I usually recorded mixed cassettes on Type II tapes using processing through a PC-based automation system, so the tapes were pretty loud and full sounding. The cassettes sounded easily as good as FM, and outside of heat, lasted better than burned CDs do.
I don't have USB capability in my 2017 Micra, so I still burn the odd mixed CD.
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Binson Echorec wrote:
Cassettes had the luxury of portability in an age where portability was rare - but still limited to 120 minutes of music. The 10,000 or so songs stored on the microSD card in my phone matches the portability and far outstrips the capacity of a cassette.
Anybody unironically buying a cassette in 2025 is doing so to be trendy. No different than those ridiculously over-sized sippy-cup Stanley mugs.
Yes, I imagine most of them go un-played.
Have heard that there is a small subset though, who like the forced-linear nature of them. A little forced attention in an ADD world.
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Anyone who worked in radio news in the 70s and 80s remembers those workhorse Sony machines. They came with a shoulder strap for carrying to assignments, a mic input (and a separate built in mic), a VU meter and a top loading slot for the cassette. We used them at CFTR for years and they were extremely reliable.
I can't quite find the model number or an accurate pic, but they were everywhere back then. Great for recording interviews, scrums or background sound. Wish I still had mine!
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The most popular tape deck for radio news was the Sony TC 5000.
There was an earlier Sony model and I can't remember the model number.
It was slightly bigger and heavier than the TC 5000.
I still have a 1990s vintage boom box that works just fine.
It has a cassette deck and a CD player.
It also has two detachable speakers.
It runs on batteries or you can plug it into an electric outlet.
I also have a slew of recorded cassettes.
I used to make mix tapes especially for my car back when I had a cassette player in the 1990s model Pontiac Sunfire.
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newsguy1 wrote:
...I had a cassette player in the 1990s model Pontiac Sunflower.
Fixed it for you. 😁
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Cassettes sounded good if you had a cassette deck with Dolby. That's pretty much how Dolby started. They were a startup company back then and I was interested in the technology so I wrote them and they sent me some brochures about Dolby that I still have today.
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newsguy1 wrote:
The most popular tape deck for radio news was the Sony TC 5000.
Yes, that's it! The TC5000. Also the TC-142. What wonderful, durable machines. Battle tested in the worst conditions of weather, press conferences, noisy protests and more.
I remember when CFTR's Tricia Wood was conducting an interview with the president of the company making a drug called Bendectine. It was harming patients and the business would not admit it. When she started asking hard questions he didn't want to answer, he surreptitiously kicked the mic cord out of the front of the machine, which was sitting on the floor during their back and forth.
What he didn't know was that the machine had an embedded mic. It caught the rest of the conversation and although we had to work to boost the audio, he was caught in the act, thinking it wasn't being recorded.
Now where did I put those alligator clips?
The TC-142 at Radio Museum
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These releases are more collectible knickknacks than something anyone is actually expected to listen to. I can't speak to Taylor Swift's releases, but I've been told a lot of these modern cassette releases actually sound worse than vintage ones because they use lower quality materials and aren't transferred correctly.