Author Topic: Tyrolis Musikverlag - Music, Sport And Weekend (1991) [FLAC]  (Read 2116 times)

Retromatic

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Another interesting one-off featuring Austrian composer Marty O'Brien. I'm unsure as to whether these tracks belong to some other library?

Enjoy...

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Craig-UK

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Re: Tyrolis Musikverlag - Music, Sport And Weekend (1991) [FLAC]
« Reply #1 on: May 30, 2023, 09:09:38 AM »
Thank you very much, I will give these a listen and let you know if I recognise any

slax69

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Re: Tyrolis Musikverlag - Music, Sport And Weekend (1991) [FLAC]
« Reply #2 on: May 30, 2023, 02:40:56 PM »
Thank you very very much for this one.

This has been uploaded on YouTube before but I guess it was only recorded from a tape.
« Last Edit: May 30, 2023, 04:03:25 PM by slax69 »

joakim95

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Re: Tyrolis Musikverlag - Music, Sport And Weekend (1991) [FLAC]
« Reply #3 on: June 10, 2023, 01:47:13 PM »
Thanks.

I have this album on cassette and it's recorded in Dolby Stereo according to the album cover.

The CD album does not have any Dolby logo on it.

Psyclon

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Re: Tyrolis Musikverlag - Music, Sport And Weekend (1991) [FLAC]
« Reply #4 on: June 10, 2023, 03:06:58 PM »
I think in that matter, DOLBY is more tape-related due to their noise reduction - which is not a thing on a CD.
While DOLBY STEREO itself is just that - stereo sound, I really think somewhere in that chain has had their technology applied which is not required on digital media.

nidostar

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Re: Tyrolis Musikverlag - Music, Sport And Weekend (1991) [FLAC]
« Reply #5 on: June 10, 2023, 09:00:39 PM »
I have this album on cassette and it's recorded in Dolby Stereo according to the album cover.

The CD album does not have any Dolby logo on it.
Yes, as Psyclon says, Dolby B, and later Dolby C, are noise reduction processes which were used on cassette tape recordings in an attempt to cut down the audible hiss present owing to the tape being only ⅛ inch wide (narrow) and running at 1⅞ inches per second (very slow).