A girl at work found an 8mm reel of film of when her parents were dating, and decided it would be a neat Christmas gift to transfer it to DVD for them. She was looking for a copy of the song "Summer Rain" by Johnny Rivers to use as a soundtrack, since it was her parents favorite song. Copying the 8mm reel over to DVD was no problem, I did that for her with my DVD recorder last week. Finding this song however proved to be more elusive!
We decided to try I-tunes first, since I've got it loaded on my laptop, and wouldn't mind having a copy of the song too, I can part with $1 for a good tune. Well, they had all sorts of classic Johnny Rivers music on the site, all good, but not that one. So, she headed out to best-buy to see if she could find a CD of the song...same thing...plenty of Johnny Rivers CD's, but none had the song on it. I had an idea. I remembered having an 8-track of the album "A touch of gold" So, I wonder if we could purchase that album online anywhere, so we tried Amazon.com and a few other places. The album is out of print, along with the song!
So, I got a bright idea, I'll just make an MP3 file of the song off the 8-track. The fidelity won't be hardly anywhere near as good as a CD, but then again, recording technology in 1968 wasn't all that good anyways. The 8-track sound will give character to what is already an old format anyways.
Last night, I dug the old 8-track deck out of the attic, and connected up to the audio input jack on the computer. The deck needed a little TLC, like a head cleaning and alignment, and a few other tweaks. Within a few minutes though, it was clicking along in all it's seventies glory. I then found the tape that had the coveted song on it. Had to go through 2 rounds of the tape before I got the record levels set up. I "massaged" the signal with a dynamic range expander and some other signal processing to the point that it sounded pretty good. I wasn't however able to get all the tape hiss out, but noticed that the 8-track deck doesn't sound all too bad really...a nice warm, analouge type sound that will go good with the 8mm images. I then made a WAV file out of the song, and copied it into the video file using my editing software. I also copied the song to a 256 bit rate MP3 too, and presented the DVD to her at work. She was totally delighted, and of course was wondering where in the heck I found a copy of the song she wanted since her search was fruitless. I kept it a secret...should I tell her about my stash of old 8-tracks and my deck?...she might laugh at me for sure if I tell her where it really came from
We decided to try I-tunes first, since I've got it loaded on my laptop, and wouldn't mind having a copy of the song too, I can part with $1 for a good tune. Well, they had all sorts of classic Johnny Rivers music on the site, all good, but not that one. So, she headed out to best-buy to see if she could find a CD of the song...same thing...plenty of Johnny Rivers CD's, but none had the song on it. I had an idea. I remembered having an 8-track of the album "A touch of gold" So, I wonder if we could purchase that album online anywhere, so we tried Amazon.com and a few other places. The album is out of print, along with the song!
So, I got a bright idea, I'll just make an MP3 file of the song off the 8-track. The fidelity won't be hardly anywhere near as good as a CD, but then again, recording technology in 1968 wasn't all that good anyways. The 8-track sound will give character to what is already an old format anyways.
Last night, I dug the old 8-track deck out of the attic, and connected up to the audio input jack on the computer. The deck needed a little TLC, like a head cleaning and alignment, and a few other tweaks. Within a few minutes though, it was clicking along in all it's seventies glory. I then found the tape that had the coveted song on it. Had to go through 2 rounds of the tape before I got the record levels set up. I "massaged" the signal with a dynamic range expander and some other signal processing to the point that it sounded pretty good. I wasn't however able to get all the tape hiss out, but noticed that the 8-track deck doesn't sound all too bad really...a nice warm, analouge type sound that will go good with the 8mm images. I then made a WAV file out of the song, and copied it into the video file using my editing software. I also copied the song to a 256 bit rate MP3 too, and presented the DVD to her at work. She was totally delighted, and of course was wondering where in the heck I found a copy of the song she wanted since her search was fruitless. I kept it a secret...should I tell her about my stash of old 8-tracks and my deck?...she might laugh at me for sure if I tell her where it really came from