DGAJ> (And then there's the intentional skip at the end of
DGAJ> "(Your Love Is Like) Nuclear Waste" so that the explosion
DGAJ> goes on forever. And the Monty Python album that had two
DGAJ> grooves on one side, making essentially a three-sided LP.
Yes! And all the interesting records in Soviet Union ("samizdat" records
which one could roll up ones sleeve, because of police confiscation of
modern music, or postcard records - a thin film postcard with sound
grooves, which could be played on normal players, but there were
"postcards" sold under the counter which were actually modern,
forbidden music but looked the same as the kitsch music postcards sold
normally), or all the records which are part of the album's artwork as
well (Cassiber with their interesting transparent records, Art Zoyd
with their 33RPM SP-size flexible record made of thin film again, with
"place coin as weight here if record slips" mark on one side (it
worked!), and I am sure a plethora of other interesting usages and
misuses of the technology for creative purposes.
That is interesting stuff. Anybody knows about some more details or an
article somewhere? The MP's double-grooved record, all the others,
etc. Thanks!
Good light!
fra