Copper


Sincere Flattery

Issue 178Opening Salvo

As a fortune cookie connoisseur, I may have found the best one yet: “Listening, not imitation, may be the sincerest form of flattery.” Especially when it comes to audio gear!...

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Audio Up Close: the Magico A3 Loudspeaker

Issue 178From the Listening Chair

“From the Listening Chair” is a new column that will focus on picturing current audio components and loudspeakers, as opposed to the vintage photography that Howard contributes to “Audio Anthropology.”...

Holiday Warmth

Issue 178Audio Anthropology

Some serious “wow” factor here – a 1950s McIntosh C-104 mono tube preamplifier. It used three 5751 tubes and could accommodate five (mono) audio sources.   Detail shot of the...

An Interview With Mobile Recording Innovator Da...

Issue 178The Copper Interview

David W. Hewitt is one of the pioneers in designing remote multitrack recording studios. He and his mobile trucks recorded thousands of concerts from hundreds of artists across the United...

Around the World In 80 Lathes, Part 28

Issue 178Revolutions Per Minute

Having visited the Great British disk recording industry in our last episode (Issue 177), it is now time to ask where it all began. How did they start eating beans...

Lou Reed’s Spirit Remains in New York, On Recor...

Issue 178From the Sweet Spot

Lou Reed passed away on Oct. 27, 2013 but interest in him remains high, as evidenced this past June by the opening of an exhibit at the New York Public...

Back to My Reel-to-Reel Roots: The Cassette Str...

Issue 178Natural Born Kessler

As noted in previous installments, including my report on the recent AudioJumble in the UK (Issue 164) and a later column (Issue 175) about the emergence of a new generation...

How I Learned to Stop Kvetching and Make Nice W...

Issue 178From the Sweet Spot

Christmas is approaching with all the subtlety of a runaway tanker train. Pop-up ads, doorbuster sales, inflatable plastic figures on people’s lawns, and the Christmas music machine, starring saints, snowmen,...

Eric Gales: A Blues Guitar Force of Nature

Issue 178Disciples of Sound

The only people who don’t think being nominated for a Grammy is still a big deal are those not being nominated for a Grammy. This is particularly true when you...

Pilgrimage to Sturgis: Epilogue

Issue 178New Vistas

The next morning, I rolled over, kissed Melody on the cheek, and told her that I felt the need to hit the road. “I know,” she said, “you’re a rolling...

Some Holiday Music Favorites

Issue 178Featured

I might be a bit of an outlier. I typically don’t play Christmas music all that often during the holidays, since we are bombarded with it daily from November 1...

Stuffy Shmitt: Portrait of an Artist

Issue 178Featured

In the 1990s I worked at the North Star Pub in Manhattan’s South Street Seaport, a stone’s throw from the East River and in view of the old Fulton Fish...

Buy The Audio Gear Your Room Needs: Some Thoughts

Issue 178Speaker Stories

Have you ever eaten in a restaurant and noticed something along the lines of: “Chef’s Special – Deconstructed Steak Pie,” or perhaps, “Exploded Fish Pie?” OK, I admit, I made...

The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Is Not Rock and Roll

Issue 178Featured

The full telecast of the November 5, 2022 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame (RRHoF) induction ceremony is now available on HBO – all four hours of it. Although I...

Even More Rock Album Mini-Reviews

Issue 178Frankly Speaking

In Issue 150 I listed my 150 desert island favorite rock albums, and followed up with a selection of reviews from that list in Issue 151 and Issue 166. I...

Jack Daley: Rockin’ the Bass for Lenny Kravitz ...

Issue 178Idle Chatter

Bass players are often the forgotten men and women on the rock and roll totem pole. If you think about it, the notion is unfounded given their importance in laying...

Can’t You Hear Me Knockin’?

Issue 178Twisted Systems

Well, eh…no, according to my wife. A joke goes like this: My wife says to me, “You either have hearing loss or Alzheimer’s; you’re deaf and you don’t pay attention...

Pietro Locatelli: Rediscovering a Master of Vio...

Issue 178Something Old / Something New

Pietro Locatelli (1695 – 1764) is one of those gifted Baroque composers who somehow didn’t remain a well-known name through the centuries. He may not be a hidden Bach or...

Barbara Lynn: Electrifying R&B Pioneer

Issue 178Off the Charts

There was never anything ordinary about Barbara Lynn. A Black woman playing electric guitar professionally in 1960s Texas was extraordinary enough. And her technique was surprising: she plucked the melody...

Ascension

Issue 178Parting Shot

Staircase, New York City, overlooking Madison Square Garden. John Flory is an industrial designer who works for an architectural fabrication firm specializing in high-end staircases. He is an artist, designer,...