Oxford University Tape Recording Society

The Oxford University Tape Recording Society (OUTRS) was a student's club of recording enthusiasts that has existed from at least 1966[1] until at least 1976.[2] Among its members were AES fellow Michael Gerzon and Peter Craven, co-inventors of the Soundfield microphone, Nimbus Records director Jonathan Halliday and sound engineer and prolific Ambisonic recordist Paul Hodges (father of pianist Nicolas Hodges).

The OUTRS' recordings have been quoted in early listening experiments on four-speaker stereo reproduction.[3] Subsequently, the society conducted some ground-breaking experiments in full-sphere surround recording,[4][5][6] laying the foundation for the development of the Ambisonic surround sound system.

External links

References

  1. Stephen Thornton, michaelgerzonphotos.co.uk retrieved 2014-01-01
  2. Paul Wilson and Adam Tovell, The Michael Gerzon Archive and the British Library’s Archival Sound Recordings Project, eContact! Volume 10.x, 2010
  3. Michael Gerzon, Surround sound from 2-channel stereo, HiFi News, August 1970
  4. Michael Gerzon, Experimental Tetrahedral Recording: part one, Studio Sound, Vol. 13, August 1971, pp 396-398
  5. Michael Gerzon, Experimental Tetrahedral Recording: part two, Studio Sound, Vol. 13, September 1971, pp 472, 473 and 475
  6. Michael Gerzon, Experimental Tetrahedral Recording: part three, Studio Sound, Vol. 13, October 1971, pp 510, 511, 513 and 515
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