Abnormal Grooves - why vinyl is better than CDs and MP3s

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  • čas přidán 28. 02. 2018
  • Some vinyl records have cleverly arranged grooves to delight and confuse the listener. Here's my collection.
    Listen to the radio show here: festivalofthespokennerd.com/tv...
    Read about other strange grooves here:
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unusual...
    Twitter: / moulds
    Instagram: / stevemouldscience
    Facebook: / stevemouldscience
    Buy nerdy maths things: mathsgear.co.uk
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 1,8K

  • @GFmanaic
    @GFmanaic Před 6 lety +2781

    Admit it, you just wanted a good reason to play with the ladybug book.

    • @SteveMould
      @SteveMould  Před 6 lety +705

      It's *really* fun.

    • @mal2ksc
      @mal2ksc Před 4 lety +66

      When I heard the track "touches itself" I instantly thought "demonetized!"

    • @Netherexio
      @Netherexio Před 4 lety +20

      @@SteveMould My sister has the same exact book and I always try to find it.

    • @logangrove4103
      @logangrove4103 Před 4 lety +7

      Lol this was so funny

    • @philippemichelvidori7248
      @philippemichelvidori7248 Před 3 lety +8

      @@SteveMould I never hold my vinyls like this

  • @EebstertheGreat
    @EebstertheGreat Před 4 lety +1473

    7:49 Real horse racing is also basically a really tedious way of rolling a die.

    • @millomweb
      @millomweb Před 4 lety +43

      If you don't want boring, set up an automatic Worms game.

    • @jeffjackson6354
      @jeffjackson6354 Před 4 lety +5

      If you don't want tedious run Worms with actual tanks.

    • @zwz.zdenek
      @zwz.zdenek Před 3 lety +18

      Throwing a wrench into the gears, real horse racing is a tedious way of just burning your cash.

    • @shahabazkhan1
      @shahabazkhan1 Před 2 lety +4

      No, it totally depends on the performance of the horses, if you have like 4 champion horses then you choose one of them right? It's basically a sport. You can't say a whole world cup event of some sport is a tedious way of rolling the die can you?

    • @Llamagoyf
      @Llamagoyf Před 2 lety +25

      @@shahabazkhan1 I can and I will.

  • @TristanBomber
    @TristanBomber Před 6 lety +1127

    We just need to encode "Dormammu, I've come to bargain" on that lock groove.

    • @MrDoboz
      @MrDoboz Před 4 lety +23

      Someone has to make that lol

    • @peppidesu
      @peppidesu Před 3 lety +8

      you don't need to encode anything. the thing inscribed is literally the waveform of the music

    • @dumchican
      @dumchican Před 3 lety +22

      @@peppidesu Well, it's encoding air pressure into side to side movement of a metal stylus. It's kind of like encoding something from written on a piece of paper into a punch card or as ascii, it conveys the same information, it's just in a different format.

    • @albert_the_cool8092
      @albert_the_cool8092 Před 3 lety +4

      Its been two years but SynthRose you are an absolute genius

    • @maxrodgers5702
      @maxrodgers5702 Před 3 lety +1

      @@albert_the_cool8092 agreed

  • @billyfairbank
    @billyfairbank Před 5 lety +386

    "Where have I hidden your keys?" lol! Your poor parents.

    • @Kenionatus
      @Kenionatus Před 4 lety +7

      Good thing it's only got three possible answers :)

    • @ryansamarakoon8268
      @ryansamarakoon8268 Před 4 lety +1

      How do you even engrave into a tiny vinyl with tools a kid would find?

    • @evelynphipps610
      @evelynphipps610 Před 4 lety +2

      @@ryansamarakoon8268 He could just change the face of the card

    • @ryansamarakoon8268
      @ryansamarakoon8268 Před 4 lety +2

      @@evelynphipps610 no the card just acts as a pointer to a specific track on the vinyl. You can't store data on them

    • @janemorrow6672
      @janemorrow6672 Před 3 lety +2

      In a pigsty.

  • @AuroCords
    @AuroCords Před 6 lety +1282

    This means that time travel to the past IS possible!
    All we need is a machine that travels forwards, and THEN switch the battery around like on that toy robot.
    Nobel prize please.

    • @unclejimmy7
      @unclejimmy7 Před 6 lety +101

      I know you're just making a joke here, but the analog to flipping the battery around would be negative energy or mass. In theory, if you had negative energy, you could reverse the flow of time.

    • @djedg10
      @djedg10 Před 6 lety +30

      Reverse the polarity!

    • @jasondashney
      @jasondashney Před 6 lety +25

      ...but don't cross the streams.

    • @twirlipofthemists3201
      @twirlipofthemists3201 Před 6 lety +6

      Important safety tip.

    • @bjornnilsson1222
      @bjornnilsson1222 Před 6 lety +1

      Auro Cords 💩💩👻🖕🏿🖕🏿🖕🏿🖕🏿🖕🏿🖕🏿👦🏿👦🏿💍🤙🏿👅🤙🏿👶🏿👶🏿👀👀👀👀👀👀👀👀👀💋👄✍️✍️

  • @dan_tr4pd00r
    @dan_tr4pd00r Před 6 lety +146

    Favourite bit of insanity about the Matching Tie and Handkerchief record: even though it says the record comes free alongside the matching tie and handkerchief, you weren't always guaranteed to get one or the other with your purchase.

  • @pun-isher1501
    @pun-isher1501 Před 6 lety +587

    I once made a playable disc out of vinyl in 10 minutes.
    That is a *record*

    • @Milamberinx
      @Milamberinx Před 6 lety +55

      I once made a playable disc that represents the heavenly body on which we live. That's a world record.

    • @MarkTillotson
      @MarkTillotson Před 6 lety +26

      Letter printed in an English newspaper in 1978 went something like: "Dear sir, I was born in '33 and am now, in '78, aged 45 - is this a record?"

    • @gabriel38g
      @gabriel38g Před 6 lety +1

      Playable Disc from CD in 5 minute video
      czcams.com/video/yu9139LDIc4/video.html

    • @-danR
      @-danR Před 5 lety +22

      5 minutes later, you accidentally stepped on it.
      Record broken.

    • @unnamedchannel2202
      @unnamedchannel2202 Před 5 lety +1

      @Human Resources, it was the Mirror. But now it is broken as tubeist- dan accidentally stepped on it.

  • @davideranieri5553
    @davideranieri5553 Před 6 lety +231

    Coincidentally, I listened to Sgt. Pepper for the first time on vinyl after having it on CD for a long time. I remembered the phantom track at the end, but of course, it lasts a limited amount of time on a CD. I spent a good minute or two waiting for the thing to finish before realizing the track was looping on itself... I felt like an idiot afterwards...

    • @duroxkilo
      @duroxkilo Před 4 lety +6

      @Human Resources chill bro, nothing travels faster than light :}

  • @vasilivanich3842
    @vasilivanich3842 Před 6 lety +1847

    "I'm trolling (...), obviously everyone agrees that CDs and MP3s have better audio quality than vinyl, that's not controversial" lol

    • @TarekMidani
      @TarekMidani Před 6 lety +117

      Lol, sorry but CD's contain highly compressed forms of audio 😂 your title is actually correct, vinyl is better

    • @MovingThePicture
      @MovingThePicture Před 6 lety +577

      Tarek Midani CDs are uncompressed 🤦

    • @truephysics2835
      @truephysics2835 Před 6 lety +642

      Sigh, this is going to be a comment chain I assume...
      No, vinyl does not give you "better" audio. The compression for MP3 is essentially inaudible, though yes, it does exist. However, it is absolutely nothing at all compared to the inconsistent and horrible frequency response you get from a vinyl player. You can not produce high amplitude signals in the high and low-frequency range from a vinyl, so the players often have amplifiers to boost these frequencies, that is they have equalisers. The equalisers are not all exactly the same and thus you get different audio from different players. Also, the vinyls themselves have tolerances, degrade, have issues with dust, ...
      If you are after high fidelity, vinyl is the wrong thing to look for.
      That doesn't mean it sounds bad though. Just like tube amplifiers which are way, way "worse" than solid state since they are horribly non-linear, they can produce nice sounds. It is just utterly wrong to say they are more accurate to what the artist wanted it to sound like, that is they are not high fidility.

    • @Noise-Bomb
      @Noise-Bomb Před 6 lety +97

      To clearify: Every sane person.

    • @ViniOnTheRocks
      @ViniOnTheRocks Před 6 lety +141

      Vinyl is romantic. That I can give it.

  • @thedoublek4816
    @thedoublek4816 Před rokem +29

    There were also vinyls which only consisted of locked grooves. Those were made for DJs (hip hop and electronic) who wanted to do some live remixing by playing some loops, like additional rhythm tracks etc., over the main track and were aptly named "DJ Tools". A popular kind of those tools were focusing on drum breaks, like those instrumental drum solos often found on Funk records (think "Amen Brother", "Funky Drummer" or "It's a New Day").
    The locked grooves contained loops which had to have a certain tempo in order to seamlessly loop over (most turntables have a pitch / speed control, so adjusting the loop tempo to the main track you want to "enhance" is not a problem anyway), 133 1/3 BPM. However, hitting the right groove could be tricky.

  • @SteelSkin667
    @SteelSkin667 Před 6 lety +291

    Really interesting stuff, while I did know about infinite run-out grooves, I didn't realise that those multi-track records existed. I too really like vinyl records not because of how they sound, but because of the way they work. Not to mention the artwork.

    • @DamiontheSpawn
      @DamiontheSpawn Před 6 lety +5

      Want to know something even crazier? There are records that when played the needle moves from the center outward. Techmoan has a great video on it.

    • @georgeprice7922
      @georgeprice7922 Před 6 lety +4

      DamiontheSpawn And then there's Jack White's "Lazaretto", which not only has the inside out groove, but hidden tracks pressed into the labels (one plays at 45 and the other at 78).

    • @paulmichaelfreedman8334
      @paulmichaelfreedman8334 Před 5 lety +1

      @@DamiontheSpawn Think about it , had trey done that from the start (AND CDs also play from the centre outward) it would have made the mechanics of a record player much easier.

    • @paulmichaelfreedman8334
      @paulmichaelfreedman8334 Před 5 lety +2

      @Jayden Whitcomb The natural properties of vinyl and Tube amps sort of hide distortion, especially the amps tubes have a natural compressor function, rounding the distortion peaks and making it sound less distorted.

    • @Trev9
      @Trev9 Před 5 lety

      @@paulmichaelfreedman8334 soft clipping

  • @consubandon
    @consubandon Před 5 lety +11

    Somewhere here, amongst my three-sided Monty Python records, I've also got a copy of the 1812 Overture from the early-1980s days of audiophile digital vinyl. In order to more fully reproduce the cannon shots (the engineers of this particular record were very, VERY proud of the fidelity of these cannon shots, and the record came with the warning these shots could break poorly constructed loudspeakers), the phonograph needle had to swing so violently it would have crossed the normally-adjacent grooves, and so, at the appropriate moments in the recording, the spacing of the grooves abruptly becomes much, much wider than elsewhere on the disk, in order to allow for the physical motion required to reproduce this far louder sound. You can easily see the altered sections from several feet away, where the groove suddenly looks almost like the trace of an EKG.
    In that vein, w-a-y back in the early days of television, there was once a challenge demonstration featuring a man who was familiar with so many recordings of different musical compositions, he could correctly identify a piece of music just by looking at the groove pattern on the surface of a vinyl record, even with its label masked-over. He would have had no trouble whatsoever identifying The 1812.

  • @raykent3211
    @raykent3211 Před 6 lety +115

    Techmoan has a video about a record that plays from the middle outwards. Ta for this, my friend had a horse racing multi-groove one.

    • @maker-matt
      @maker-matt Před 4 lety +3

      Its Bolero - inside out and is still available. and there is a very good reason for it. not just a gimmick

    • @casey6556
      @casey6556 Před 3 lety +2

      And now he’s done one on the horse racing one too!

  • @CoolDudeClem
    @CoolDudeClem Před 6 lety +542

    You say you love vinyl, but you're using a crosley turntable?

    • @nilswegner2881
      @nilswegner2881 Před 6 lety +79

      CoolDudeClem yeah, this person does not have the right of talking about the war between analog and digital because of course his records will sound worse than CDs when played on one of these record grinding machines

    • @nickminadeo8386
      @nickminadeo8386 Před 5 lety +69

      DJ Slinus why should it be a war? Why can't people enjoy both...analog and digital should be side by side, not competing. It's just a waste of time to compare, they're too different

    • @candykanefpv98
      @candykanefpv98 Před 5 lety +42

      and grabbing the record by the grooves.

    • @nickminadeo8386
      @nickminadeo8386 Před 5 lety +121

      If you want to get nit-picky, it's technically one groove...

    • @thugasaurusrex6004
      @thugasaurusrex6004 Před 5 lety +5

      Nick Minadeo I love you lol

  • @macronencer
    @macronencer Před 6 lety +34

    "The way I played with it was to try and figure out how it worked." YES! That is the story of my childhood. I even extended that tendency to my parents' possessions. When I was 10 I took my dad's tape recorder to pieces and reassembled it. Luckily, I got it right...

  • @SlavomirDanas
    @SlavomirDanas Před 5 lety +18

    Steve talks about playing music from a CD holding in hand an installation medium of Microsoft Windows...

  • @GuyNamedSean
    @GuyNamedSean Před 6 lety +670

    It hurts me so much to see you casually tossing those records around and placing them on the floor. I was taught as a kid to be very meticulous about keeping vinyls clean.

    • @olik136
      @olik136 Před 6 lety +80

      At the time vinyl was the goto medium most people didn't care as much as todays enthusiasts do- and yet most of todays records are from that time and work fine...

    • @AnimilesYT
      @AnimilesYT Před 6 lety +8

      They are probably cheap ones no one wants to have.

    • @schregen
      @schregen Před 6 lety +80

      I don't believe you. Because records were never called vinyls until the hipsters came along a few years ago. Their name is records.

    • @spiritusinfinitus
      @spiritusinfinitus Před 6 lety +39

      I loved the fact that they were well used and filthy! Just to think of all the brittle "78" records we used to throw around like Frisbees as kids and "scratch" rapper style. Some may even have been priceless now for all I know. No idea what happened to any of them or what would've now been a vintage record player. You can't take any of this crap with you, so have fun with it and let it give you some good memories instead of it being overly precious. There's probably something similar in a museum somewhere for the people who care.

    • @douglas.turner
      @douglas.turner Před 6 lety +30

      Well, that record player isn't doing them any favours, either...

  • @ViniOnTheRocks
    @ViniOnTheRocks Před 6 lety +45

    I'm so glad you started with that sentence.

    • @nilswegner2881
      @nilswegner2881 Před 6 lety

      Vinícius P. da Silva why, when the title is true?

    • @CockatooDude
      @CockatooDude Před 6 lety +11

      +Nils Pc Vids Just because vinyl is capable of sounding good doesn't mean it sounds the best out of all formats.

    • @nilswegner2881
      @nilswegner2881 Před 6 lety +1

      CockatooDude no but definitely better than mp3 and other digital crap

    • @CockatooDude
      @CockatooDude Před 6 lety +12

      +Nils Pc Vids "Other digital crap" Like what exactly?

    • @dupisdisasterpiece1058
      @dupisdisasterpiece1058 Před 5 lety +1

      DJ Slinus Certainly better than mp3 (Because mp3 is just lossy garbage) But certainly NOT flac or wav.

  • @adamruth
    @adamruth Před 2 lety +7

    Mad magazine did this in the 70s. They included a flexible record as a tear out insert. It had multiple grooves, possibly more than two. As I recall it was only the ending that was different, so you wouldn’t know which groove you had right away. Basically, each groove had a different punchline.

  • @jca111
    @jca111 Před 6 lety +234

    Ohh man - I can deal with the Crosley but don't touch the record surface.
    Not to mention the tossing of the records onto the floor!

    • @wellivea1
      @wellivea1 Před 6 lety +15

      Zero Cool Why? I mean, if you *want* noisy records with audible damage, sure. You don't have to spend a ton of money or anything, just be careful when you're handling them and brush them off with a carbon fiber brush before each use. There's also replacing inner sleeves that use paper rather than plastic (or plastic lined paper). All of that would probably have a max one-time cost of $40 max (the sleeves coming in packs of 50 or more).

    • @wellivea1
      @wellivea1 Před 6 lety +8

      They're not like CDs where you can scratch them up fairly bad and still get no reduction in audio quality (not that you should be scratching those either, though). You will get recurring clicks or pops where there is a scratch and a contant scratchy hiss where there is embedded dust, and with improper long-term storage you can get mold, etc that is very loud.

    • @timverma
      @timverma Před 6 lety +17

      because Steve clearly prefers to listen to his music on cd so he doesn't care about the audio quality at all, they are just there for memories. the quality isn't going to be so bad as to be completely ruined, so the few times a year he used them this way won't matter.

    • @wellivea1
      @wellivea1 Před 6 lety +10

      Timothy Verma Well, if that's how he likes to use them, sure. But this is meant to be educational, he should have shown at least a little bit of care for them. Even when you're pretty careful you can drop a record and create a long gash like that. Putting one onto carpet which is riddled with small, tough fibers and stuffed with dust (vinyl attracts it's own worst enemy, dust, very well) just shows a complete lack of thought imo.

    • @dextertreehorn
      @dextertreehorn Před 6 lety

      Maybe Steve is more kind of "user of this robot toy" ....

  • @MikkoRantalainen
    @MikkoRantalainen Před 2 lety +5

    6:30 As there are two interleaved spirals, the easies way to swap to another spiral is to raise the arm using the lever, wait for half a turn and lower the arm. That should get you to the middle of another spiral if your lever doesn't move the player arm anywhere.

  • @rohitchaoji
    @rohitchaoji Před 2 lety +6

    Never thought I'd see Steve Mould casually whip out EVOL. Great album. My favourite by them,

  • @GamerX-2000
    @GamerX-2000 Před rokem +2

    I had a toy train when I was younger. It had a blue disk that was my first experience with learning how solid state storage works. The disk was also a gear(by that I mean it wasn’t really just a disk, but a gear), and when the train was turned on, the gear would spin. The gear had little bits that stuck out of it, like inverted grooves, that when the reached the part that was reading the information, it would play sound. I loved this toy and never disassembled it, so idk how it played sound, but it sounded like the parts sticking out were hitting pins that played music, like a music box. Because the inverted grooves were all the same length, it played different sounds based on where the grooves were, so the song was only as long as one rotation of the disk.

  • @Ultima2876
    @Ultima2876 Před 4 lety +3

    The way he throws around those records makes me die inside

  • @thepianoaddict
    @thepianoaddict Před 6 lety +70

    A record does have multiple grooves. One on each side.

    • @bdf2718
      @bdf2718 Před 6 lety +32

      +Zero Cool
      Did you read the "one on each side bit"? Read it again if you're unsure.

    • @David-ne2wx
      @David-ne2wx Před 6 lety +2

      bdf2718 Funny guy

    • @munjee2
      @munjee2 Před 5 lety +2

      Not if its single sided like many often are

    • @baranoid
      @baranoid Před 5 lety

      @Error 909 Not Found it's like a don't repeat rather than don't repeat list. neat.

    • @johnb6723
      @johnb6723 Před rokem

      Lol.

  • @CalebMaclennan
    @CalebMaclennan Před 6 lety +19

    Trolling meter: off the charts, certified platinum.

  • @ryanburr8419
    @ryanburr8419 Před 2 lety +6

    Those were some clever records, I especially loved that robot. I think what all the examples come down to is the experience of the medium being fun and unique. Not technically better (although vinyl sometimes suffers less from the loudness wars less making them better in one way) but a unique experience that many people appreciate.

  • @EnergyWell
    @EnergyWell Před 3 lety

    I love that when I start one of your videos, I am typically over confident about the subject matter, and then you completely upend my knowledge from the bottom up and I learn so much anew.

  • @caiocc12
    @caiocc12 Před 6 lety +112

    The thing is that by restricting the usage of content so much by excessive copyright enforcement, less and less people get exposure to the content which will lead to less and less people consuming it, reducing profits.

    • @Metal_Tao
      @Metal_Tao Před 6 lety +1

      What?

    • @Milamberinx
      @Milamberinx Před 6 lety +11

      I think The Beatles are doing ok.

    • @Gabu_
      @Gabu_ Před 5 lety +11

      @@Milamberinx For how long? I don't know a single young person who listens to The Beatles.

    • @twobob
      @twobob Před 4 lety +4

      @Fester Blats "their" copyright nonsense. Pretty sure it has zero to do with "them"

    • @Sammie_Sorrelly
      @Sammie_Sorrelly Před 4 lety +17

      It's complicated. In isolation, exposure is a good thing, of course - but since the piracy boom in the 90s and the streaming services which provide a legal alternative but still pay musicians basically nothing, the general perception is that music is something that's inherently free, which makes it hard to make any money as a musician because people only *buy* music as an additional extravagance. As a musician, I'm quite happy with the idea of my music being freely available to anyone who might want to hear it, but I also want to make enough money from it that I can afford to dedicate a significant amount of my time to it, hone my craft and make the best music I can. So... as things are now it's not an easy problem to solve.

  • @theguyinthefunnyhat
    @theguyinthefunnyhat Před 4 lety +8

    Some locking grooves/run-out grooves contain "noise" which, when recorded to a tape and put into some old computers, run programs. You could also include an SSTV signal into the run-out to have a slow scan image of the album cover, photo of the artist or anything really.

    • @novameowww
      @novameowww Před 2 lety +4

      Could you run Doom on a vinyl?

    • @dylantowers9367
      @dylantowers9367 Před rokem +1

      @@novameowww You can't actually run doom on a vinyl, as it isn't Turing Complete. You can store the executable binary on the vinyl though. It's not that different to storing binary data on an audio cassette, which is what the ZX Spectrum did.

    • @novameowww
      @novameowww Před rokem +1

      @@dylantowers9367 I think that might've been what I meant but I honestly can't remember. Thanks though!

    • @thedoublek4816
      @thedoublek4816 Před rokem +1

      There is a video on CZcams, where somebody managed to boot an old computer from a vinyl, forgot the title though.

  • @LaGuerre19
    @LaGuerre19 Před 5 lety +41

    "Daddy? *_ERRRGGH_* Followed by the sound of gunfire." lmao

  • @zimbag
    @zimbag Před 4 lety +5

    Love the low key relaxed presentation, Thanks mate.

  • @shreyanshdarshan3199
    @shreyanshdarshan3199 Před 6 lety +232

    Minutephysics, kurzgesagt, and now you! Today is a good day 😂

    • @jesselanting3931
      @jesselanting3931 Před 6 lety +6

      Shreyansh Darshan now we just need a cpcgrey vid and it will be complete

    • @shreyanshdarshan3199
      @shreyanshdarshan3199 Před 6 lety +10

      Or a 3blue1brown vid 😊
      Edit: Smarter Every Day just uploaded 😮😮

    • @PratikPatel
      @PratikPatel Před 6 lety +3

      So did physicsgirl

    • @Henrix1998
      @Henrix1998 Před 6 lety +1

      jesse lanting And Vsauce

    • @notmyname5449
      @notmyname5449 Před 6 lety

      Almost the same comment was on SmarterEveryDay's video today ;)

  • @sapphireskies9129
    @sapphireskies9129 Před 5 lety +15

    Anyone else crying inside with how he is handling the records😫

  • @bpoldauf
    @bpoldauf Před 6 lety +1

    OH MY GOD, how can you handle your records this way, I was not able to finish the video seeing you touching the grooves and throwing the records on the floot, ABSOLUTELY BARBARIC

  • @rickybasilone8989
    @rickybasilone8989 Před 6 lety +1

    I love watching you discover and explore stuff, it's so inspiring

  • @Mikeztarp
    @Mikeztarp Před 4 lety +12

    "Where have I hidden your keys?" So as a kid, you were like the Riddler? xD

  • @jopmens6960
    @jopmens6960 Před 5 lety +18

    Vinyl = music + random ASMR

    • @reiniervanzwieten7092
      @reiniervanzwieten7092 Před 4 lety +1

      If you have a clean vinyl and good gear there are no crackles

    • @Callie_Cosmo
      @Callie_Cosmo Před 4 lety

      Reinier van zwieten well then you would loose the best part of listening to vinyl :/

    • @off_Planet
      @off_Planet Před 4 lety

      @@reiniervanzwieten7092 That is, in fact, a lie. A vinyl record will always have a poor noise performance when compared to digital audio. It's funny how Vinyl Stans are pretty much all physics deniers.

    • @reiniervanzwieten7092
      @reiniervanzwieten7092 Před 4 lety

      i didn't say anything about noise. I was talking about crackles. I am not stupid i know about audio :P. It's just stupid how some people think that vinyl always has crackles while that's not the case. And when i point it out they think i'm saying vinyl is superior(which i am not saying is the case)

  • @zanryll
    @zanryll Před 6 lety +2

    On alt J's album this is all yours there is a lock groove before the final track. This way you have to manually move the needle past the groove to listen to the "hidden" track

  • @andrewballard780
    @andrewballard780 Před 2 lety

    Thank you so much for all your incredibly entertaining and informative videos. You are a legend, keep up the good work.

  • @jahrenskiashkevron1499
    @jahrenskiashkevron1499 Před 6 lety +5

    10:24 This is Steve as you should know him.

  • @Ricocossa1
    @Ricocossa1 Před 5 lety +4

    I agree the lock groove on sgt peppers is creepy as hell. I remember when I first listened to it. My record player just stops when it hits the end, so the sound would get lower and lower in pitch until it stopped. When you don't expect it it's quite creepy.

  • @ToMeK3001pro
    @ToMeK3001pro Před 4 lety +6

    "it's too precious"
    *plays the vinyl backwards few moments later*

    • @kindlin
      @kindlin Před 2 lety

      It sounded like it was dying. And it definitely wasn't designed for that.

  • @Beateau
    @Beateau Před 3 lety +4

    One of my favorite lock-grooves is on a Mars Volta vinyl that sounds just like a dripping faucet.

  • @alicyjinx8923
    @alicyjinx8923 Před 6 lety +30

    I'm someone who grew up listening to CDs and MP3s and I think Vinyl sounds really nice, and dropping the needle on the record and then watching the needle slowly make it's way to the center of the record is a very tactile and mesmorizing experience. I'm also endlessly fascinated by older technology and audio formats...that's why I have 3 different tape decks and an 8 track player XD

    • @electricpaisy6045
      @electricpaisy6045 Před rokem +4

      I also enjoy that but what is somewhere between sad and annoying to me is that since the rewive of vinyl people romanticised it so much, they will tell you it's better and they won't accept any scientific explanation why they are wrong with that. They even get angry about it sometimes.

    • @jamespyacek2691
      @jamespyacek2691 Před rokem

      Both of my cassette players are broken. But I have plans to fix them. Then I'll buy a turntable.

  • @DaveShevy
    @DaveShevy Před 6 lety +4

    I love this video so much! Wish I could like it twice:) Thank you as always!

    • @Badassvidsz
      @Badassvidsz Před 4 lety

      No problem just make more accounts ................lol :-)

  • @xja85mac
    @xja85mac Před 6 lety

    I love your hand keeping on turning the record inside the logo. Good job!

  • @PiotrBarcz
    @PiotrBarcz Před 7 měsíci +1

    The lock groove is:
    1. Yeah, meant to keep the needle from skidding off onto the label, deafening everyone in the room with the scratching and to keep the needle from wearing down really quick
    2. The biggest reason, I think, on 33 rpm records and other more modern records is to give the machine's auto-stop mechanism time to actually lift the needle and return it to it's cradle

  • @deepblue8143
    @deepblue8143 Před 5 lety +14

    Ah Crosley, the number one when it comes to audio Fidelity and quality.

    • @hajoact
      @hajoact Před 2 lety

      The shittest quality I've ever heard/seen.

  • @joystickmusic
    @joystickmusic Před 5 lety +6

    oh man the dust and fingerprints on your records! O_O

  • @styleplague
    @styleplague Před 4 lety

    Very happy to find your channel!

  • @cathyerley3057
    @cathyerley3057 Před 4 lety

    Steve, you crack me up the faces you make sometimes, but I learn something new with each of your videos, like multi-groove records. (I too used to take my toys apart to see how they worked. Still do, in fact!)

  • @davidvirgilio4166
    @davidvirgilio4166 Před 6 lety +16

    I think it would be interesting to record a known sample of white noise onto a high quality vinyl record, play it back on a high quality player, digitize it with a good ADC, then correlate that with the original white noise. It would interesting to observe the noise which is introduced because of the vinyl. Perhaps even doing the playback at different speeds to measure how the dynamics of the needle movement affect the system.

    • @volbla
      @volbla Před 6 lety +1

      Wouldn't it be only harder and more ambiguous to try and distinguish noise from noise? Why not just do it with a plain sine wave and compare that.

    • @W4LL37SK83R
      @W4LL37SK83R Před 6 lety +3

      Because noise has many frequencies but a plain sine wave just has one. Also I assume the idea was to analyze the difference using a computer or something like that, not just listening with your ears.

    • @davidvirgilio4166
      @davidvirgilio4166 Před 6 lety +5

      Volbla - Good question. A key word I used is *known* white noise. So I can compare the output of the system to the known signal. There are ways of doing that computationally on a computer. The advantage of doing it this way is that the response of a linear system can be determined with a very short sample. A disadvantage would be it's harder to detect nonlinear behavior such as harmonic excitations at a given frequency. So yeah putting other signals in there such as a sine wave which rises in pitch and sweeps out the entire spectrum would be a good idea. Thanks!

    • @volbla
      @volbla Před 6 lety

      I think i understand _slightly_ better. I'm glad if i was any sort of help :3

    • @MarkTillotson
      @MarkTillotson Před 6 lety

      Just play a popadum, that's close enough.

  • @luka9843
    @luka9843 Před 6 lety +7

    1:20 you can see the record getting scratched and vinyl shavinga coming up.

    • @nrgzrbunny7775
      @nrgzrbunny7775 Před 6 lety +6

      Luka Agulashvili I think it's just dust already on the record

  • @burkeysvids
    @burkeysvids Před 6 lety +2

    My dad had that horse racing record - it blew my mind as a kid! I always thought it was a skip that cause the randomness, I never knew it was 8 seperate tracks. It's really kind of cool to have discovered an answer to that question of how that works - 30 years after I had that question!

  • @tomharner83
    @tomharner83 Před 2 lety

    I don't know what I expected when I clicked on this video.... But this was awesome!
    My family started getting into record again... We'll be in the look out for these weird records now.

  • @hsavietto
    @hsavietto Před 6 lety +117

    I'm not really a fan of vinyl recods, but touching their surface with your fingers makes you look like a savage.

  • @mchevre
    @mchevre Před 6 lety +5

    Hey! I have Evol on vinyl too. I'll have to check that out, never noticed it.

  • @jacobduncan87
    @jacobduncan87 Před 6 lety +1

    Very cool I collect vinyls and never knew about the multiple tracks I'll have to keep an eye out for those. I learned something new today.

  • @Nil_Echo
    @Nil_Echo Před 6 lety +1

    Godspeed You! Black Emperor has a locked groove for the F#A#(infinity) album making a really cool ambient riff, and Tool's Opiate has a secret track where the groove splits and half the time you play it, the needle goes into a different groove.

  • @55Ramius
    @55Ramius Před 6 lety +7

    Very interesting. I remember playing around with those rotary string pulled sound toy. Pull string after positioned dial to hear a cow or something. If you give the string a small tug at the right time you can get it to say- This is what a cow sounds like - then tug and it would be a chicken sound or something. I used to confuse my little niece with it. lol

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP Před 6 lety

      55Ramius yes! The See N Say, right?

    • @55Ramius
      @55Ramius Před 6 lety

      Yes ! That was the name. I could not for the life of me remember what it was. : ) My niece is grown and has her own business now. Also she does not confuse cows with chickens anymore, after therapy .... lol

  • @samoopsd
    @samoopsd Před 2 lety +4

    10:58 wow, TF2 was confirmed years ago in a toy with subliminal messages, valve really out did themselves!

  • @guilhermeaandrade
    @guilhermeaandrade Před 5 lety

    This was really cool. I though I was going to hate this video but I ended up loving it. Congratulations.

  • @Antilevitation
    @Antilevitation Před 5 lety

    that openingstatement, i love you

  • @DavidGreen_au
    @DavidGreen_au Před 6 lety +3

    Wow. That was a blast from the past. I had the Monty Python record and the Horse racing game (back in the days of antiquity). Transferring Side 2 of Python to a cassette tape (as none of ever did back then :) ) was a problematic, involving several restarts to get it right.

  • @tobyjackson6514
    @tobyjackson6514 Před 6 lety +29

    No wonder vinyl sounds worse, when its played on a crosley.

    • @Knaeckebrotsaege
      @Knaeckebrotsaege Před 4 lety

      yeah the intro and that crosley on the floor made me stop watching pretty much instantly

  • @Warhawk76
    @Warhawk76 Před rokem

    I love the anecdotes about the toy and your childhood. You are I seem to be close in age, and I was always taking stuff apart as a kid too, so good times hearing about that

  • @thepatchinatior
    @thepatchinatior Před 3 lety

    loving this window into your childhood here, steve

  • @Redspl
    @Redspl Před 6 lety +57

    christ allmighty, why is your record so dirty

  • @TmoVie93
    @TmoVie93 Před 6 lety +3

    I can't be the only one thinking at 8:32 : "Piiigs in Spaaaaaaaace!"

  • @sadsongs7731
    @sadsongs7731 Před 2 lety +2

    9:07 "through the magic of buying two..."

  • @jawa7609
    @jawa7609 Před rokem

    Just here to keep the chat and video alive! Thanks Steve, I actually lol'd!

  • @jeremystanger1711
    @jeremystanger1711 Před 6 lety +71

    "That's not controversial"

    • @CockatooDude
      @CockatooDude Před 6 lety +19

      In fairness it shouldn't be. You can make digital audio sound however you want. The same cannot be said for records.

    • @deadeyeduncan5022
      @deadeyeduncan5022 Před 5 lety

      @@CockatooDude Yep, you can make them sound however you want. And that's why nothing sounds like it should sound.

    • @gavinjenkins899
      @gavinjenkins899 Před 5 lety +3

      Sure some silly people believe anything you can say. I think he just meant to say something more like "objectively true"

    • @reiniervanzwieten7092
      @reiniervanzwieten7092 Před 4 lety

      Like modern vinyl is mostly stuff recorded digitally and then ported to vinyl so same quality as the digital stuff. But because of the nature of digital audio if audio hasn't been digitised it is better.

    • @threepe0
      @threepe0 Před 3 lety +3

      @@deadeyeduncan5022 absolute nonsense.

  • @kakurerud7516
    @kakurerud7516 Před 6 lety +5

    if you directly capture a vinyl record to a cd (or equivalent quality format NOT applying frequency 'loudness' compression) and do a blind test, you can not tell the difference without guessing. I use to do this test on all sorts of snooty "audiophiles." It was fun times. They can also not tell if both sources are vinyl or digital. (also I found out the low limit for stereo sampling rate is around 33khz before they notice something's up) and yes it is true the older the subjects were the less highs they are able to notice.

    • @kakurerud7516
      @kakurerud7516 Před 6 lety

      I use to do evil stuff like record the raw output from a cartridge (dont matter what kind) and then apply the equalization to the wav file's output during playback.

    • @robertromero8692
      @robertromero8692 Před 6 lety +1

      Kakureru D
      I love what you did. It really does expose the whole "vinyl is better" nonsense. There have been other such tests exposing similar nonsense involving amplifiers, speaker wire, etc.

    • @georgekolbaia4246
      @georgekolbaia4246 Před 5 lety

      Kakureru D
      Michael Fremer can tell a difference :) (I am at Analog Side)

  • @JimmyLundberg
    @JimmyLundberg Před 6 lety +1

    Thanks for the brilliant video. Really interesting! Cheers

  • @aidanwansbrough7495
    @aidanwansbrough7495 Před 5 lety

    Really interesting!!! Love your videos!

  • @ophello
    @ophello Před 5 lety +3

    Wait a minute. Does every question start with “where do they live”? How does that tiny vinyl have all the questions?

    • @trollenz
      @trollenz Před 5 lety +4

      "what pictures to together ?", "where do they live ?", "match the beginning sound ?" and "how many are there ?" are the 4 different questions, remaining 2 tracks are for right or wrong answer.

    • @wesleycassford
      @wesleycassford Před 2 lety

      Wow thank you for this I was losing my mind trying to figure it out

  • @PierreThierryKPH
    @PierreThierryKPH Před 6 lety +3

    Monty Python, amazing yet again!

  • @kamoroso94
    @kamoroso94 Před 6 lety +1

    That's really groovy, Steve.

  • @bizarrefruit
    @bizarrefruit Před 2 lety +2

    Really cool video, I also love bone records from countries where rock music was censored; using X-ray vinyl to print music on was such a clever idea.

  • @DIO-nm2ut
    @DIO-nm2ut Před 3 lety +3

    2:10
    he said funny guys

  • @kirillfedtsov
    @kirillfedtsov Před 6 lety +6

    Sonic Youth!

  • @baruchben-david4196
    @baruchben-david4196 Před 3 lety +1

    As I recall, every record player I ever used, automatically brought the arm back to its resting place. I never heard anything in a lock groove.

  • @jeanpauls123
    @jeanpauls123 Před 3 lety +2

    You could have included Eyes of the Heart a 3 side jazz album by American pianist Keith Jarrett, the fourth side is a continuous silent Groove very good for testing "rumble and hum" ( unwanted noise from the motor and magnetic interference feeding back into the pick-up cartridge) On a good quality Hi-fi record deck.

  • @BensWorkshop
    @BensWorkshop Před 6 lety +72

    I'm not surprised your vinyl sounds worse than your CDs. If you handled my records like that or got them anywhere near that turntable I wouldn't let you in my house ever again.

    • @nilswegner2881
      @nilswegner2881 Před 6 lety +7

      Benedict White I wouldn't either. And please, please throw that Crosley out and grab some vintage equipment

    • @nathanielscreativecollecti6392
      @nathanielscreativecollecti6392 Před 6 lety +3

      Or a U-TURN orbit

    • @nilswegner2881
      @nilswegner2881 Před 6 lety +2

      Nathaniel Neubert yeah or if you really want something not expensive but new get an atlp120

    • @halo3odst
      @halo3odst Před 5 lety +5

      Or i could just be that vinyl doesnt sound as good as CDs.

    • @halo3odst
      @halo3odst Před 5 lety

      Alright, allow me to put the debate in the ground where it belongs *10" open reel deck at 15 IPS.*

  • @unoriginalusernameno999
    @unoriginalusernameno999 Před 6 lety +4

    OUTRO MUSIC please!

  • @gigglysamentz2021
    @gigglysamentz2021 Před 4 lety +2

    3:48 I assume it's also convenient to have a bigger space for sound by having a wide lock groove

  • @profdrdrnoname4360
    @profdrdrnoname4360 Před 5 lety

    I loved this video a lot. Thanks!

  • @coriscotupi
    @coriscotupi Před 5 lety +4

    I never expected to live in a time where someone would need to explain to newer generations how a vinyl record works, that the needle goes down a spiral groove, etc. The future definitely has come.

  • @cerebralaudio5587
    @cerebralaudio5587 Před 6 lety +21

    I'm glad you were trolling with the title of this video, and admitted it up front... I was ready to watch this video and write a comment about the inaccurate nature of it... Fortunately there is only two things to "complain" about: you are totally handling those records incorrectly. And, please, get a better turntable than a Crosley...they are absolute garbage.
    As for the other content: yeah, I knew about the lock groove and multiple grooves things... But there are things that you can't do with a record that you can with a CD, such as hidden tracks... I've had at least one CD where you won't find a track until you go back past the first track... I've also had CD's that you didn't find all the tracks unless you were willing to skip out to track 60 or 80, when the last listed track was actually 10 or 12... How is that possible? It has to do with the ways CD's are encoded... They contain a "header" that is kind of like a table to contents to the CD. The specs for the header allow for some interesting and unusual track arrangements... So, either way there were creative things you could do with both CD and records...kind of makes them equal in my book...

    • @nilswegner2881
      @nilswegner2881 Před 6 lety

      CerebralAudio it is a shame, that he was Trolling with the title, because it is just true what the title says

    • @cerebralaudio5587
      @cerebralaudio5587 Před 6 lety +12

      Hahaha - nice attempt at a reverse-troll... I'll play along. ;)
      The simple fact is: it is objectively provable via scientific measurement that digital reproduction is more accurate (aka better) than analog reproduction. (I'm not talking about crappy low quality lossy encoding formats, but correctly created, non-lossy CD's, FLAC encodings, etc.)
      On the subjective side: your ears may *prefer* the sound of analog reproduction from vinyl, tapes, etc. But that does not make it better (in the objective, scientific sense) than digital reproduction.

    • @TheGreenDoggoOfWisdom
      @TheGreenDoggoOfWisdom Před 3 lety +1

      My Green Day record has a hidden track. Vinyl can have hidden tracks.

  • @lewismassie
    @lewismassie Před 6 lety +1

    A small Steve disassembling his toys to mess with people is an amazing image

  • @user-pi5re9bj6i
    @user-pi5re9bj6i Před 4 lety +1

    If you’re into the cool lock groove things check out the skull split with jeromes dreams and orchid you have to start it in the middle and either play it backwards or forewords depending on what you want to play. It’s shaped like a skull.

  • @Henrix1998
    @Henrix1998 Před 6 lety +20

    Doooon't touch the vinyl with your dirty fingers! Only touch the edge or the middle

    • @AndrewKay
      @AndrewKay Před 6 lety +1

      That's what they said to Grandmaster Flash, too.

    • @MarkTillotson
      @MarkTillotson Před 6 lety

      Remember to clean the fingerprints off with emery cloth and white-spirit now...

    • @Blitterbug
      @Blitterbug Před 4 lety

      ...or with a hammer :)

  • @connorm955
    @connorm955 Před 5 lety +4

    A CD is going to sound a hell of a lot better if you're using a crosley cruiser lol.

    • @videoplusdvd
      @videoplusdvd Před 5 lety

      I wonder how a CD would sound on a Crowley Cruiser...🤢

  • @jedgrahek1426
    @jedgrahek1426 Před 2 lety +1

    I love the pretty pink Siamese Dream vinyl, and the see-though green of Pisces Iscariot. And I've listened to the copies of the White Album and Abbey Road on vinyl that I got from my dad at least as many times as listening to them digitally. Playing the White Album loud on a good system, knowing everyone in the building is hearing Back in the USSR.... feels great.

  • @ideegeniali
    @ideegeniali Před rokem

    Getting extra sounds from your toy as a kid was brilliant!

  • @GroovingPict
    @GroovingPict Před 6 lety +16

    a record doesnt start out as a "blank disc", it starts out as a lump of vinyl about the size of a hockey puck... it is pressed by metal stampers which has the negative of the grooves, which both flattens the "puck" into a disc, affixes the paper labels to it (theyre not stickers!), and gives it its grooves all at the same time. A vinyl record has never been a "blank disc". Labels are not stickers: stickers are self-adhesive; labels are just plain paper.

    • @tookitogo
      @tookitogo Před 6 lety

      GroovingPict hah, I didn’t see your comment until after I posted mine, saying almost verbatim what you did! (Except I didn’t mention the labels.) GMTA!!!

    • @whitepointstarproductions8905
      @whitepointstarproductions8905 Před 6 lety

      Lathe cut records would fit what he described but you're right yeah

    • @MarkTillotson
      @MarkTillotson Před 6 lety

      Hence the term "pressing". BTW: www.theguardian.com/music/2015/jan/29/bone-music-soviet-bootleg-records-pressed-on-xrays

    • @shickster1
      @shickster1 Před 6 lety +1

      An excellent example of manufacturing: czcams.com/video/PF4A4wdnXkU/video.html

    • @deadeyeduncan5022
      @deadeyeduncan5022 Před 5 lety +1

      "affixes paper labels to it" So you're saying they put a sticker on it....because that's what a sticker is.

  • @EduardQualls
    @EduardQualls Před 4 lety +6

    And, again, the audio-phillies have to be reminded that, unless they have a gramophone [or tape machine] (from the 1940's, '50's or early '60's) that is entirely tube-based, that analog signal from the tone arm HAS to go through analog-to-digital processing hardware (a RAMDAC chip) before that now-sampled signal can be sent through the computer that is the pre-amp, amp and modulation core of any modern audio system. Once the system is through with the digital signal there, it has to go "in reverse" through a RAMDAC to create a now-analog signal that can drive any attached speakers, or it stays digital to go through Bluetooth, etc., to the RAMDAC in the headphones/earbuds. Digitally recorded audio goes only through that second, sampled-to-waveform RAMDAC; vinyl has to go through two of them.
    So, all modern audio playback is digital, no matter what the recording medium/format.
    All vinyl does is give people something to read while they imagine that the sound quality is better: it's a form of record-scratch fever.

    • @skrubol
      @skrubol Před 4 lety +3

      I think you're a few decades off and are partially confusing solid state with digital. There are still plenty of turn tables with no digital in the audio stream, and it's not too hard build a system with a discreet analog amp rather than piping it into a surround sound receiver or something.

    • @ColoradoStreaming
      @ColoradoStreaming Před 4 lety

      @@skrubol I agree, even with a Class AB or Class D amp as long as you have a analog volume pot the signal is analog from Vinyl to speakers. The only time the signal is digitized is if it is run through an AVR with a remote etc.

    • @slinkman79
      @slinkman79 Před 4 lety

      I want to smoke the same shit as you, sir!

    • @edwardpaulsen1074
      @edwardpaulsen1074 Před 4 lety

      Your definition of "modern" must be exceedingly narrow... and is only fitting if being the signal is sent to a digital device... opamps are NOT digital and are the most common devices used within most audio equipment... also a RAMDAC is quite literally a Random-Access Memory Digital-to-Analog Converter and is entirely incapable of converting an analog signal to digital so you lost half of your argument already. When you also couple the fact that a RAMDAC chip was **ONLY** used for video devices... well you have only proven your complete ignorance beyond all reasonable doubt.

  • @macronencer
    @macronencer Před 6 lety

    I have Matching Tie and Handkerchief, but it was on cassette, and I had no idea about the double groove thing. Now I need to go and check whether I have all the tracks that were on the vinyl version!

  • @rachelrodgers9171
    @rachelrodgers9171 Před 2 lety

    I love this guy's expression when the robot did the ''gunfire'' sound as it plays the voice backwards.