Copper


A Murder of Symmetry

Issue 85QUIBBLES AND BITS

Ronnie McGill received a note, mysteriously signed “Michael Schumacher”, which offered him a friendly warning. “Vinny Spadina is figuring to rub you out”. This, naturally, was worrisome. Ever since he had...

Consolidation

Issue 85THE AUDIO CYNIC

Is there such a thing as economy of scale? If you put 10 similar companies together, can you succeed by offering, as a friend suggested, the VW variations? Audi, Skoda,...

My C-24

AND OTHER ILLNESSESAUDIOIssue 85MUSIC

In one of his Paul’s Posts (“Capturing Air”), Paul McGowan mentioned my AKG C-24, and I thought I would try to describe the mic, and how it’s been changed. First of all:...

A Long Time Ago....

Issue 84

Welcome to Copper #84! Being the picayune sort, it annoys me when people celebrate the birthday of one long dead, and say, "this is Mozart's 263rd birthday." That may even be proper...

Empire, Part 1

Issue 84VINTAGE WHINE

The primary reason I began writing these articles (and a similar blog on Audiogon, back in another lifetime) is that there are few cohesive sources of information about the history...

Listless

Issue 84MUSIC TO MY EARS

Last Christmas I was up late with my boys drinking Scotch and talking about music. Before things got too sloppy the subject came up on the ridiculous nature of best...

Crazy Horse

Issue 85MUSIC'AL NOTES

“C’est mon mari!” yelled Arianne as we rushed into the kitchen to help her husband. Many years ago, I became the distributor of YBA electronics, a French company based in...

The One That Got Away

Issue 84TWISTED SYSTEMS

The day I just missed a 1959 ‘Burst As an avid guitar collector, I’m often asked about my method and reasoning behind the guitars that I own or have owned....

Noir et Blanc

Issue 84MUSIC AUDIO AND OTHER ILLNESSES

In 1983, one of my favorite records was released: Zazou/Bikaye/CY1’s  Noir et Blanc. I thought I might try to tell you a little about it. A collaboration between composer and producer Hector Zazou,...

Jack Joseph Puig, Part 2

Issue 85THE COPPER INTERVIEW

[Part 1 of John Seetoo’s talk with engineer/producer Jack Joseph Puig was featured in Copper #84—Ed.] John Seetoo: What is your preferred equipment for listening to music at home for your own...

Prokofiev Piano Concertos

Issue 84TOO MUCH TCHAIKOVSKY

What I’m writing about this week: Sergei Prokofiev (1891–1953) and his five piano concertos. Also, concertos by Huw Watkins (b. 1976). Plus, backstory from W. A. Mozart, especially his twenty-odd...

Issue 84

Issue 84Opening Salvo

Welcome to Copper #84! Being the picayune sort, it annoys me when people celebrate the birthday of one long dead, and say, "this is Mozart's 263rd birthday." That may even be proper...

Read more

Is There a Right Size?

Issue 84THE AUDIO CYNIC

Second-guessing is at the heart of online forum behavior, and I wouldn’t want to rob anyone of the joy that comes from  being an expert on a subject of which...

Cultural Differences

Issue 84MUSIC'AL NOTES

France. When my kids were small, we rented a house in Provence, France for a couple of weeks. It was a lovely Old Provencal style house, which was once a...

Notre Dame Organum

Issue 84SOMETHING OLD / SOMETHING NEW

On April 15, 2019, Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris was severely damaged in a fire. As it happens, that church has a special place in music history. Construction on Notre...

21st Century Schizoid LP

Issue 84QUIBBLES AND BITS

It was all the way back in the 1980’s that consumer digital audio suddenly took root in the form of the CD, and before you knew what had hit you...

Kitchen Doors and Paper Horns, Part 2

Issue 85MAKE IT YOURSELF

Around 2006, I discovered that digital technology could be a game changer for audio reproduction. Getting full control over the system and avoiding the analog crossover was for me a...

Kitchen Doors and Paper Horns, Part 1

Issue 84MAKE IT YOURSELF

Why horns? Some might ask, why horns? These big and sometimes odd-looking creations of ancient times, can’t fit through a normal door opening, much less being set up in a...

363 Days in Vietnam, Part 4

Issue 87FEATURED

[Previous installments from Michael’s book, 363 Days in Vietnam, appeared in Copper #84 , #85, and #86—Ed.] Day 301 Our mission at Tra Bong was never clear – it seemed like the powers that be were...

363 Days in Vietnam, Part 3

Issue 86FEATURED

[Previous installments from Michael’s book, 363 Days in Vietnam, appeared in Copper # 84 and #85—Ed.] Day 244 A home-made recording of a new rock band arrived today from my girlfriend (and future wife) –...

363 Days in Vietnam, Part 2

Issue 85FEATURED

[Our first installment from Michael’s book, 363 Days in Vietnam, appeared in Copper # 84—Ed.] Day 119 This photo of me pointing a gun at the camera has a lot to tell. A towel fastened...

363 Days in Vietnam, Part 1

Issue 84FEATURED

Most of what the average person knows about the Vietnam War is gleaned from movies, TV dramas and documentaries like the one Ken Burns’ produced in 2018. Almost every one...

Tori Amos

Issue 84OFF THE CHARTS

Crossover artists seem to become fashionable in waves. Still, there aren’t many who have combined classical chops and a pop sensibility with as much popular and critical success as Tori...

Jack Joseph Puig, Part 1

Issue 84THE COPPER INTERVIEW

Amassing an impressive body of engineering and producing work, stretching over 4 decades’ worth of record credits, Jack Joseph Puig has been behind the glass for many hit albums and critics’ favorites....

Axpona 2019, Part 2

Issue 84FEATURED

[Part 1 of Rudy’s Axpona report was in Copper # 83—Ed.] One of my show favorites last year was the system from Eikon Audio, the new company founded by Gayle Sanders, co-founder of...

Schrödinger’s Show

Issue 83THE AUDIO CYNIC

To an exhibitor at an audio show, the show simultaneously exists and does not exist. If the show is thankfully, blessedly busy, the personal and professional domain of the exhibit...

Steppenwolf

Issue 83MUSIC TO MY EARS

“The music business is a cruel and shallow money trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free, and good men die like dogs……There’s also a negative side.”...

A Conversation With “Cousin Brucie”

Issue 83TWISTED SYSTEMS

[Originally published in Goldmine magazine—Ed.] Talking Beatles, The JFK Assassination and rival DJ Murray the K…. In 1964, there were only 4 ways to connect with your rock ‘n’ roll heroes: Buying...

Taxi

Issue 83MUSIC'AL NOTES

The four of us shuffled into the doctor’s office. An old man gazed at us from behind his thick glasses. “Drop them!” He growled. “And the underpants!” We complied as...

Axpona 2019, Part 1

Issue 83FEATURED

Mid-April in Chicago once again presents us with Axpona, one of the largest audiophile shows in North America. Weather was once again an unwelcome participant in this year’s show. Various...

Every Day is Earth Day?

Issue 83Opening Salvo

Welcome to Copper #83! I rarely react to PR pronouncements with more than an eye-roll, but when a utility company known for its string of coal-fired generating plants sent out a...

Read more

Lasers

Issue 83QUIBBLES AND BITS

Ever wondered how lasers work?…Wondered what it is that gives them the interesting properties they exhibit?…You have?….Good! This column’s for you. Lasers are all about electrons. Atoms are composed of a...

Pan and Perséphone

Issue 83TOO MUCH TCHAIKOVSKY

Today we begin with Mahler and his Third Symphony. Then we move on to Perséphone, a melodrama for which Igor Stravinsky composed music in 1934. Both works—and a lot of other music from...

Marian McPartland: Eight Great Tracks

Issue 83TRADING EIGHTS

Britain still had a few more months of World War I to endure when Margaret Marian Turner was born in Slough, England in 1918. By the time World War II...

Cream

Issue 83OFF THE CHARTS

While American audiences obsessed over four mop-topped Liverpudlians called the Beatles, some British rockers were becoming equally fascinated by American blues music. They studied it, learned to play it, and...

Leslie Ann Jones, Part 2

Issue 83THE COPPER INTERVIEW

[Part 1 of John’s interview with Leslie Anne Jones was featured in Issue 82.] J.S.: You have also recorded some famous virtuoso instrumental soloists, such as Miles Davis, Carlos Santana, Dave...

Handel Arias

Issue 82SOMETHING OLD / SOMETHING NEW

In 1706, at the age of 21, Handel made the best of all possible contacts: the Medici family, who had massive amounts of money that they loved to spend on...

Al Green

Issue 82OFF THE CHARTS

Al Green loved Elvis Presley as much as he loved Mahalia Jackson. His vocal showmanship paired with the faith that grounds his singing is all the evidence you need. He...

Great Opera

Issue 82QUIBBLES AND BITS

Here’s what I wrote back in Copper 72: “Many people can’t stand opera, and to be fair, you can see where they’re coming from. Hour after hour of tedious recitative, all in...

It Might As Well Be Spring

Issue 82

Welcome to Copper #82! I've never been good with ambivalence. The song quoted in the title above: does it mean that it's not spring, but just kinda sorta looks like it?...

Great Artists Dilemma

Issue 82TWISTED SYSTEMS

As much as my Springsteen article caused an outpouring of comments, I was impressed by the numbers and passions of the comments on my “Why Can’t America produce a Great...

A Familiar Story

Issue 82THE AUDIO CYNIC

This story has nothing to do with audio. It does, however, have a lot to do with the “Cynic” part of this column’s title. I’ve encouraged Copper‘s writers to go somewhat...

Fairchild: Sidebar

Issue 82VINTAGE WHINE

As I indicated in my first installment on Fairchild, back in Copper # 75, part of the enjoyment of researching these articles is ending up somewhere completely unexpected. As the series of articles went...

Sofar

Issue 82FEATURED

I recently stumbled across an article naming the 30 best albums of 1969, an auspicious year for popular music if ever one was. How auspicious? Janis Joplin appears on the list...