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Lost & Found Sound |
List Price: $18.95
Your Price: $18.95 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
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Rating:  Summary: Dazzling Review: From beginning to finish I was struck by its simplicity and familiarity. Heartbreaking voice of a little girl who will not live to reach adulthood. The everyday neighborhood sounds brought back my own childhood. The song by the 'coal girl' incredibly beautiful. The role cigar workers played in employment improvements by having been read to while working by the literate and knowledgeable among them. Well done. A masterpiece. I love this cassette and would not part with it for any price. I found it in a local 'Dollar' Store. I've gone online only looking for Volume two?
Rating:  Summary: Apparently, all things were not considered Review: NPR's "Lost and found sound" features a robot voice, droning narratives, and strange fade-in/fade-out effects. And then there are the lost and found recordings themselves, none of them the type of audio artifact the majority of humans would find in their attic, basement, disc storage box, or the like. This is the collection's first cheat--that there is hardly any of the vernacular focus promised by the tone of the project. The second cheat is that the majority of recordings are presented in snippets, with voice-overs, or side by side with NPR's library of annoying effects (pounding, syncopated percussion and the like), so that the listener cannot always tell what is fabricated and what is authentic. Not that it matters much, because few of the artifacts are very compelling, save for an account of the Gettysburg Address read by an eye- and ear-witness and a fragment of an Edison recording that I hope I have the chance to hear sometime. Noah Adam's narration (the robot voice mentioned above) lacks the warmth of an average weather-cube forecast, and the various civilian (non-NPR) narrators are allowed to push the art of redundancy to its limit. "People talking about lost and found recordings" would have been a more accurate title, overall. Personally, I would feel royally taken in had I been one of the probably many people who answered NPR's call for home recordings, only to find that the vast majority of offerings never had a chance of being considered in the first place. "Audio snapshots" from the periphery of everyday experience hardly offer much of a picture of the previous century.
Rating:  Summary: Apparently, all things were not considered Review: NPR's "Lost and found sound" features a robot voice, droning narratives, and strange fade-in/fade-out effects. And then there are the lost and found recordings themselves, none of them the type of audio artifact the majority of humans would find in their attic, basement, disc storage box, or the like. This is the collection's first cheat--that there is hardly any of the vernacular focus promised by the tone of the project. The second cheat is that the majority of recordings are presented in snippets, with voice-overs, or side by side with NPR's library of annoying effects (pounding, syncopated percussion and the like), so that the listener cannot always tell what is fabricated and what is authentic. Not that it matters much, because few of the artifacts are very compelling, save for an account of the Gettysburg Address read by an eye- and ear-witness and a fragment of an Edison recording that I hope I have the chance to hear sometime. Noah Adam's narration (the robot voice mentioned above) lacks the warmth of an average weather-cube forecast, and the various civilian (non-NPR) narrators are allowed to push the art of redundancy to its limit. "People talking about lost and found recordings" would have been a more accurate title, overall. Personally, I would feel royally taken in had I been one of the probably many people who answered NPR's call for home recordings, only to find that the vast majority of offerings never had a chance of being considered in the first place. "Audio snapshots" from the periphery of everyday experience hardly offer much of a picture of the previous century.
Rating:  Summary: Apparently, all things were not considered Review: NPR's "Lost and found sound" features a robot voice, droning narratives, and strange fade-in/fade-out effects. And then there are the lost and found recordings themselves, none of them the type of audio artifact the majority of humans would find in their attic, basement, disc storage box, or the like. This is the collection's first cheat--that there is hardly any of the vernacular focus promised by the tone of the project. The second cheat is that the majority of recordings are presented in snippets, with voice-overs, or side by side with NPR's library of annoying effects (pounding, syncopated percussion and the like), so that the listener cannot always tell what is fabricated and what is authentic. Not that it matters much, because few of the artifacts are very compelling, save for an account of the Gettysburg Address read by an eye- and ear-witness and a fragment of an Edison recording that I hope I have the chance to hear sometime. Noah Adam's narration (the robot voice mentioned above) lacks the warmth of an average weather-cube forecast, and the various civilian (non-NPR) narrators are allowed to push the art of redundancy to its limit. "People talking about lost and found recordings" would have been a more accurate title, overall. Personally, I would feel royally taken in had I been one of the probably many people who answered NPR's call for home recordings, only to find that the vast majority of offerings never had a chance of being considered in the first place. "Audio snapshots" from the periphery of everyday experience hardly offer much of a picture of the previous century.
Rating:  Summary: My gift for the holidays Review: Quirky - odd - historical - rich - multi layered - surprising - intimate - sweet - intriguing......are words that come to mind when I listened to this collection of stories. Cigar Stories was incredible! Tennesse Williams - fun, funny, compelling - Someone recording the sound of Aurora borelais? how bizarre ! how fantastic ! The pitchmen in Carnival Talkers... LBJ and the helium filled astronaut ! - The Gettysburg eyewitness account... I found this a most amazing collection. Beautifully produced stories - great listening
Rating:  Summary: Well researched, well edited, bears repeated listening Review: Releases of this type always have to stand up to the "repeated listening" test, and this one certainly does. Lots of compelling stuff here to keep you coming back from time to time. Fans of this CD/radio series ought to seek out a couple similar releases from a few years back called "Lucas & Friends Discover A World Of Sounds" and "One Of One: Snapshots In Sound," both of which artfully document the world of home-made audio recordings, as found in thrift stores and garage sales.
Rating:  Summary: Well researched, well edited, bears repeated listening Review: Releases of this type always have to stand up to the "repeated listening" test, and this one certainly does. Lots of compelling stuff here to keep you coming back from time to time. Fans of this CD/radio series ought to seek out a couple similar releases from a few years back called "Lucas & Friends Discover A World Of Sounds" and "One Of One: Snapshots In Sound," both of which artfully document the world of home-made audio recordings, as found in thrift stores and garage sales.
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