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Old February 22nd 07, 05:22 AM posted to alt.collecting.8-track-tapes,alt.marketing.online.ebay,alt.marketplace.online.ebay
Wereo_SUPREME
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"Salty" wrote in message
...
duty-honor-country wrote:


most people in the late-1970's still had 8-track players in their cars
and homes as well
Most People? Absolute garbage. By the early seventies car cassette and
cassette radio combination players were common, not eight tracks. If you
wanted to purchase a new car with an eight track you had to order it
specifically. It wasn't a standard option as there was already enormous
difficulty in finding new release songs on eight track. You had to "burn
your own" for modern music.



you either are too young to know better, or too old to remember
clearly
Neither.

My very first new car (aged seventeen - graduation present) had an eight
track, all subsequent cars had radio/cassette players. I was unhappy
about the limitations of the eight track and replaced it with a car
cassette player in 1970. It was a second hand Panasonic player taken
from a three year old wreck. I was quite pleased with it.

My last eight track was a combination unit built into an Akai reel to
reel recorder. It didn't see much use. I still have it.

Regards

Salty


domestic and foreign car mfrs. put 8-track decks in cars as factory
equipment and dealer installed options, well into the early 1980's


I am not saying that they didn't. I am saying that they were not a
*standard* option. They had been superseded by Radio/Cassettes and they
had to be ordered/requested. By the early eighties they were nearly
impossible to find.

They had an appeal to people who had invested money and time into
collecting eight track music. Anyone who had no existing collection (and
for many who had) a cassette offered more convenience and flexibility,
particularly once a few advancements in head technology, Dolby etc,. made
the smaller format outperform the larger older style heads,


you're pretty sharp on tax law, but on the 8-track history is not
accurate



It is *absolutely* accurate.

I have a (legal) music collection that exceeds three thousand albums. I
have strong associations with two prominent '70's rock groups, and a
lifelong enthusiasm and appreciation for music. I know what was available,
I know what was popular (the area where you seem to be lost) and I know
what was not.


at our local high school here during 1975-80, nearly ALL the kids
drove cars with 8-track decks in them- cassette was considered
somewhat of a joke-


Our experiences differ. In my college days, a person with an eight track
in a late seventies car was considered old fashioned or blue
collar/trailer trash. Not sure why. Maybe because they were more common in
Pickups and Muscle cars. Maybe because as the supply of new eight track
albums dwindled, the few readily available seemed to focus on R&B,
country/bluegrass and old Rock&Roll, not contemporary music. Pickups and
Muscle cars certainly were around, but they weren't the "norm". Like it or
not, the norm with regard to music in the seventies was disco. Try to find
concurrent popular label disco releases on eight track during the
seventies. It was pretty much Cassette and Vinyl LP. Not many cartridges
in the music stores.


8-tracks still outsold cassettes by a far margin until 1983


Not so, not even close. By 1983 CDs were in play, cassettes were
approaching Vinyl sales and eight tracks were museum pieces. They had
stopped making the players several years earlier. There were no new
model/technology releases with players after 1975, and by that time they
were all Asian manufacture. Between 1979 and 1983 all of the major labels
had officially declared eight track formats no longer supported. They had
been dying for years, they didn't stop supporting them because they were
popular, they stopped supporting them because they were more expensive,
less reliable and not as popular as cassettes.


Regards

Salty

I did the biggest Musical Event Stunt in 70s Music, I'm the only one
credited with recording the mighty 1974 CALIFORNIA JAM Mega-Concert.

No offense, but if I were you I wouldn't brag about having 3,000 record
albums. Due to my *other* musical Nuclear Warrior, all Rock and Roll is
invalid now.

Except for my World Exclusive on the California Jam and what I did there. I
am the only one who matters in Music and Film.

californiajam.com
nuclearwarrior.com



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