Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Acetate_disc> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 81 of
81
with 100 triples per page.
- Acetate_disc abstract "An acetate disc, also known as a test acetate, dubplate (a term from Jamaican reggae culture, now also applied to individually recorded discs of solid plastic), lacquer (a technically correct term preferred by engineers in the recording industry), transcription disc (a special recording intended for, or made from, a radio broadcast) or instantaneous disc (because it can be played immediately after recording without any further processing), is a type of phonograph (gramophone) record, a mechanical sound storage medium, widely used from the 1930s to the late 1950s for recording and broadcast purposes and still in limited use today.Unlike ordinary vinyl records, which are quickly formed from lumps of plastic by a mass-production molding process, a so-called acetate disc is created by using a recording lathe to cut an audio-signal-modulated groove into the surface of a special lacquer-coated blank disc, a real-time operation requiring expensive, delicate equipment and expert skill for good results. They are made for special purposes, almost never for sale to the general public. They can be played on any normal record player but will suffer from wear more quickly than vinyl. Some acetates are highly prized for their rarity, especially when they contain unpublished material.Acetates are usually made by dubbing from a master recording in another medium, such as magnetic tape. In the vinyl record manufacturing process, an acetate master disc is cut and electroforming is used to make negative metal molds from it; each mold, known as a stamper, can be used to press thousands of vinyl copies of the master. Within the vinyl record industry, acetates are also used for evaluating the quality of the tape-to-disc transfer. They were once a favored medium for comparing different takes or mixes of a recording, and if pressed vinyl copies of an impending new release were not yet available, acetates were used for getting preview copies into the hands of important radio disc jockeys.".
- Acetate_disc thumbnail Botw_acetate_damage.jpg?width=300.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageID "710162".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageLength "12182".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageOutDegree "37".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageRevisionID "678875442".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Acetate.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Aluminum_disc.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Audio_mastering.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Brian_Epstein.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Category:Audio_storage.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Cellulose_acetate.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Direct-to-disc_recording.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Direct_Metal_Mastering.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Direct_metal_mastering.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Direct_to_disc_recording.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Disc_jockey.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Drum_and_bass.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Dubplate.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Dubplates.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Dubstep.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink EBay.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Electroforming.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Electronic_dance_music.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Fonopost.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Gramophone_record.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Lacquer.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Magnetic_tape.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Master_recording.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink My_Happiness_(popular_song).
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Nitrocellulose_lacquer.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Record_press.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Sound_system_(Jamaican).
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Thats_All_Right.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Thats_When_Your_Heartaches_Begin.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink The_Beatles.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink The_Velvet_Underground.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink The_Velvet_Underground_&_Nico.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Transcription_disc.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink Vinyl_emulation_software.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink World_War_II.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink File:Acetate.jpg.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLink File:Botw_acetate_damage.jpg.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLinkText "Acetate disc".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLinkText "Acetate".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLinkText "Acetates".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLinkText "acetate demo".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLinkText "acetate disc".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLinkText "acetate promo".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLinkText "acetate record".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLinkText "acetate records".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLinkText "acetate".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLinkText "acetates".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLinkText "cassette acetate".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLinkText "disc recorders".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLinkText "lacquer ("acetate") disc".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLinkText "lacquer disc".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLinkText "lacquer records".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLinkText "lacquer".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLinkText "test acetate".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLinkText "test pressing".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLinkText "transcription disc".
- Acetate_disc wikiPageWikiLinkText "transcriptions".
- Acetate_disc hasPhotoCollection Acetate_disc.
- Acetate_disc wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Acetate_disc subject Category:Audio_storage.
- Acetate_disc hypernym Record.
- Acetate_disc type Album.
- Acetate_disc type Document.
- Acetate_disc type Document.
- Acetate_disc comment "An acetate disc, also known as a test acetate, dubplate (a term from Jamaican reggae culture, now also applied to individually recorded discs of solid plastic), lacquer (a technically correct term preferred by engineers in the recording industry), transcription disc (a special recording intended for, or made from, a radio broadcast) or instantaneous disc (because it can be played immediately after recording without any further processing), is a type of phonograph (gramophone) record, a mechanical sound storage medium, widely used from the 1930s to the late 1950s for recording and broadcast purposes and still in limited use today.Unlike ordinary vinyl records, which are quickly formed from lumps of plastic by a mass-production molding process, a so-called acetate disc is created by using a recording lathe to cut an audio-signal-modulated groove into the surface of a special lacquer-coated blank disc, a real-time operation requiring expensive, delicate equipment and expert skill for good results. ".
- Acetate_disc label "Acetate disc".
- Acetate_disc sameAs Disc_dacetat.
- Acetate_disc sameAs Disco_de_acetato.
- Acetate_disc sameAs アセテート盤.
- Acetate_disc sameAs m.034sj8.
- Acetate_disc sameAs Q4673255.
- Acetate_disc sameAs Q4673255.
- Acetate_disc wasDerivedFrom Acetate_disc?oldid=678875442.
- Acetate_disc depiction Botw_acetate_damage.jpg.
- Acetate_disc isPrimaryTopicOf Acetate_disc.