Copper


Bang, Zoom! Confessions of a Setup Man, Part Two

Issue 105

The higher the resolution of an audio system, the more that attention to detail matters. Nowhere was this more evident than in the main audio system at The Absolute Sound....

We're an American (Prog) Band

Issue 105

There are many more American progressive rock bands than you might think – and a surprising number are from the Midwest. The biggest, in terms of commercial success and recognition,...

The Lowdown

Issue 105

Chris Crepps backing up country singer Dale Watson.

Alison Krauss: Reinventing Bluegrass, Reanimati...

Issue 105

For many people, the soundtrack for the Coen Brothers movie O Brother, Where Art Thou in 2000 served as an introduction to the multitalented Alison Krauss. Her singing of “Down...

Gene Krupa: Drummin' Man

Issue 105

Not every great musician gets to reinvent his instrument the way Gene Krupa did. Under his sticks, a drum set became both more powerful and more integral to the music...

Issue 104

Issue 104Opening Salvo

Copper has been moving to increase its audio-related articles. We intend to bring you more about audio tech, interviews and company profiles, show reports and other audio subjects. That said, our...

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Ohm Acoustics, Part Two: An Inside Look

Issue 104

The Columbia Street Waterfront District of Brooklyn is technically in Cobble Hill, but it is partially separated from the rest of the neighborhood by the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. Access can be...

Border Crossings and Power Plays

Issue 104

WKBW Buffalo Out of radio station CHAM and still living in Canada, I snagged a part-time on-air job for my former program director from Pittsburgh who had moved to Buffalo,...

Secrets of the Phono Cartridge, Part One

Issue 104

Phonograph disc reproduction cartridges (phono cartridges as they’re known to you and me) all contain transducers consisting of coils of wire, iron and permanent magnets. They can be divided into...

Expanding Horizons

Issue 104

Copper has been moving to increase its audio-related articles. We intend to bring you more about audio tech, interviews and company profiles, show reports and other audio subjects. That said,...

Confessions of a Setup Man, Part One

Issue 104

This is the first in a new series about my misadventures in setting up audio systems. I’ve been an audiophile since the 1970s and have done uncountable setups for myself,...

Adventures in Audio: AT&T and Me

Issue 104

Way back in the very early days of the World Wide Web, there were things called Newsgroups. Remember them? There was rec.audio.high-end, for those of us who love this tweaky,...

An A1 Speaker System

Issue 104

The mighty Altec Lansing Voice of the Theatre A1 speaker system, 1945 catalog. I'll bet he's thinking, "With a little work, it could be adapted for home use..." They knew...

Crate Digging, Part II

Issue 104

More crate digs, and leading off with a couple of notable comedy albums. Yeah, I know, it’s not music, but still listenable, enjoyable, and very collectible. And some of it,...

Mr. Don and the Delinquents

Issue 104

During the 1970s I had an opportunity to teach a class of motivated fourth grade students interested in learning through music and the other arts. At least that's what I...

Friends from Sunrise to Sunset

Issue 104

Taken at the Santa Fe Ranch, Nogales, Arizona.

Bear: The Owsley Stanley Story, Part Two

Issue 104

As reclusive and protective of his identity as Owsley “Bear” Stanley had been, one can’t manufacture the purest LSD on the planet and personally turn on half of the state...

Cop Tales

Issue 104

First Phone Call: “Let me speak to Mary.” “I’m sorry, wrong number.” I replied. The phone rings again. An agitated voice speaks.“Let me speak to Mary. I know she is...

Cleveland Rocks. Does the Rock Hall?

Issue 104

The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and Museum began as an idea, became a building, and is now an argument. There was only the idea, and it seemed a...

Beethoven: Recent Piano Concerto Recordings

Issue 104

It’s come at last, after months of industry hype: the 250th anniversary of Beethoven’s birth year. As you might imagine, I could devote this column to new Beethoven recordings for...

Band of Brothers: Kings of Leon

Issue 104

Hard to believe, but it was 20 years ago when three brothers and a cousin from the Followill family of Oklahoma and Tennessee formed a band and named it Kings...

Beethoven Begins

Issue 104

When did Beethoven become Beethoven? That is, when did he decisively put aside student exercises and astonish listeners with something quite different? A lot of us think we know the...

Issue 103

Issue 103Opening Salvo

I’ve been thinking about this lately and seeing Paul McGowan’s recent related post on the subject made it hit home: no two audio systems are alike. Think about all the source components,...

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Some Assembly Required

Issue 103AUDIO ANTHROPOLOGY

In 1962 Allied Radio and Masonite partnered to offer this “hi-fi wall” kit. Audio components not included! From Radio-TV Experimenter, fall 1962.   “…an apartment dweller can assemble this ultra-modern hi-fi wall,...

Ohm Acoustics’ John Strohbeen: Audiophile Engin...

Issue 103THE COPPER INTERVIEW

New York City’s Brooklyn is famous for a number of things. It has some of the most expensive real estate in New York; some of it with a higher square...

Crate Digging, Part 1

Issue 103TO BE DETERMINED

Generally this particular time of year, there’s typically not a whole lot going on in terms of notable new releases in the music world. So this issue, I’m focusing on...

NAMM: An Audiophile’s Perspective

Issue 103FEATURED

The National Association of Music Merchants has been around in one form or another since 1901. It started as an organization for piano merchants, but soon expanded to include other...

Lou Reed’s Berlin – Its Music from a Fresh Pers...

Issue 103FEATURED

With the exception of Foley artists or people who collect sound effects, I think it’s safe to assume that the vast majority of audiophiles are also music aficionados. As such,...

Nancy Wilson: Eight Great Tracks

Issue 103TRADING EIGHTS

When Nancy Wilson was growing up in Chillicothe, Ohio, in the 1940s, her father bought every Nat “King” Cole and Billy Eckstine album that came out. Besides the record player...

Bear: The Owsley Stanley Story, Part One

Issue 103MUSIC TO MY EARS

In this new three-part series, you and I will explore the life and times of Owsley Stanley, who early on financed the Grateful Dead with money he made as a...

Vacuum Tubes: A Brief History

Issue 103REVOLUTIONS PER MINUTE

Vacuum tubes, also known as thermionic valves, or just valves in the UK, are electronic devices whose operation is based on thermionic emission. This is defined as the emission of electrons from the surface...

The Rise, Fall and Rise of Rod Stewart

Issue 103OFF THE CHARTS

Born in 1945 in North London, Rod Stewart grew up listening to a variety of music, from Al Jolson to Little Richard. When he got his first guitar at age...

On the Necessity of a Power Plant

AND OTHER ILLNESSESAUDIOIssue 103MUSIC

I know there’s a policy of having us writers not write about PS Audio products. But sometimes it’s something that’s just screaming at us (well, me) to do. Paul McGowan’s recent video/pod-thingy about...

Steve Waksman, Rock Musicologist: Part Two

Issue 103TOO MUCH TCHAIKOVSKY

(Author’s note: In our interview with Steve Waksman in TMT #102, he discussed the shifting social role of the electric guitar in American life; then we talked about Bill Hanley, the...

Mythical Stature: Gentle Giant, Part Two

Issue 103FEATURED

In the first installment of this two-parter, the three Shulman Brothers, along with Gary Green, Kerry Minnear, and John Weathers had completed recording their fourth album, Octopus, in 1972. They began...

BandLab: Reviving Iconic Brands for Musicians

Issue 102FEATURED

When Gibson Guitars was descending into its eventual Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing of October, 2017, one of the most demoralizing warning shots was the announcement months earlier that technical support...

Missing the Pazz and Jop Critics Poll

Issue 102FEATURED

What’s Happening to Best Album of the Year Lists For many pop music critics, December was once the most joyous month, and it had nothing to do with holidays. Immediately...

An Ode to Cassette Tape: Part Two

Issue 102REVOLUTIONS PER MINUTE

When thinking of the ultimate cassette deck, many people think of Nakamichi. The company made some of the most impressive cassette decks ever. They were used by audiophiles and professionals,...

Zaida

Issue 102MUSIC'AL NOTES

The headline in the local Jewish newspaper read, “Orthodox Man Accuses Delicatessen Owner of Cutting Meat With a Knife Used for Cheese.” This heresy of mixing meat with milk was...

CHAM Session

Issue 102TRUE-LIFE RADIO TALES

CHAM, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. My next radio station move was a big one – to another country! A program director I had worked for at WAMS in Wilmington, Delaware was...

“I Got a Fever…”

Issue 102Opening Salvo

It's 102 – I got a fever and the only cure is more music! Announcing a new contributor: Wayne Robins. Wayne is a veteran music critic and journalist, former editor...

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Steve Waksman, Rock Musicologist

Issue 102TOO MUCH TCHAIKOVSKY

(Author’s note: Last November at a meeting of the American Musicological Society, Professor Steve Waksman, who holds joint appointments in American Studies and Music at Smith College, gave a fascinating keynote paper, “A...

A Journey Through The Absolute Sound

AND OTHER ILLNESSESAUDIOIssue 102MUSIC

I discovered high-end audio in 1978. But I always seemed to have a natural inclination towards high quality experience. My father was a largely self-trained EE, who was hired at...

Gluck’s Orfeo ed Euridice

Issue 102SOMETHING OLD / SOMETHING NEW

Christoph Willibald Gluck (1714-1787), today a largely under-appreciated composer, was an important influence on Mozart, primarily because of his approach to writing operas. Happily, some of his works do get...

Patsy Cline: Country Music Groundbreaker

Issue 102OFF THE CHARTS

Country music groundbreaker Patsy Cline was born in Winchester, Virginia, in 1932. In fact, her first name was Virginia; family and friends called her Ginny. She was not, however, born...