Posts Tagged ‘Tape’

Keeper of the Tapes – Ben Stillman on Kearney Barton’s tape archive

Monday, July 16th, 2012

Ben Stillman wrote this blog post about his experience archiving the late, great Kearney Barton’s vast tape collection, which we took over after Kearney passed away earlier this year. Though it was surely a lot of work, looks like Ben also had some fun in the process and possibly discovered some gems in the collection. Thanks for fighting the good fight, Ben. RIP Kearney. We miss you.

I was asked during my first week as an intern at Light In The Attic to move equipment out of Seattle producer Kearney Barton’s home studio. At that time, the name ‘Kearney’ didn’t mean much to me, at least not as much as it came to mean in the following months. Kearney’s studio as we found it was a relic of the past filled with countless reels and vintage recording gear. We packed a U-Haul and dropped the cargo off at a storage unit in Ballard. There we compiled his legacy into a vast and disorganized stash, which, stacked one cardboard box on top of the other, towered over my 6-foot frame. I didn’t know it then, but his tapes would dominate the next year of my life.

After finishing my internship, I was kept on to sort through and catalog Kearney’s reels. Initially it seemed insurmountable – an overwhelming task that would only be conquered by passion and patience, I found that the best way for me to work was late at night with copious doses of caffeine and Brian Eno. I could judge a reel’s significance by how fastidiously Kearney had labeled it. The most interesting were the 1” and ½” tapes, because they usually contained recordings from serious musicians who had enough money to pay for nicer tape. The ¼” reels were much more tedious; they were often jingles, or radio advertisements. Occasionally a very interesting ¼” reel would pop up. I once stumbled across a box of NBA recordings from the 1970s, including recordings from the Seattle Super Sonics’ 1978 Championship season. Rummaging through the tapes I sometimes felt like a paleontologist sorting through the bones of an ancient creature. As the months passed, the stacks of sorted boxes grew taller and taller. It took nearly eight months and roughly sixty trips to Ballard, but I eventually sorted through all 5,000 Kearney reels.

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All photos by Alex Peycheff.

Although he never wrote a song, Kearney was a true artist. With the tools of his chosen medium, Mr. Barton documented the time and place in which he lived. He frequently attended Seattle music festivals, church masses, political debates and sporting events, always bringing with him his portable ¼” tape recorder. Each reel is a snapshot of the day it was recorded, and the end product of organizing the stash he left behind is a meaningful portrait of Seattle in the 50s and 60s. Kearney’s Seattle was a place where roller skating was the popular weekend activity, where there were only 13 channels on TV, where Garageband referred to bands that played in garages, and where radio – rather than the Internet – was the common venue for the discovery of new music. It was also a place where in order to record audio for any purpose, one had to first win the respect of the man behind the recording console. These tapes are a lost piece of Pacific Northwest American history and they belong in the Smithsonian. Fortunately, they’ve found an ever better home at Light In The Attic.

Donnie & Joe Emerson “Dreamin’ Wild” Limited Edition Hand-Numbered CASSETTE!!!

Wednesday, October 17th, 2012

For last week’s 10 Year Anniversary concert in Seattle, which featured the first Donnie & Joe Emerson concert in 32 years (!), we pressed up a limited edition hand-numbered cassette (edition of 100) of Dreamin’ Wild for our pop up shop at the show. We have less than 50 left and are now offering those on LightInTheAttic.net. Come on, Dreamin’ Wild on cassette? They’re so baby! Grab ‘em now before they’re gone!

Thai Funk Cassettes from Light In The Attic & Burger Records!

Tuesday, March 19th, 2013

Light In The Attic & Burger Records are stoked to bring you Thai Funk Vol. 1 & Thai Funk Vol. 2 on limited edition cassette! Over four years ago, Bangkok crate digger Maft Sai from ZudRangMa Records Thailand complied two now legendary volumes of 1960’s and 70’s Thai pop, garage rock, funk, and disco from a selection of artists unknown outside of Southeast Asia. Both packed with songs culled from the used record bins and bustling street markets of the region. Distributed worldwide by Light In The Attic Records, our dreams of seeing this archival project reissued on loud and proud vinyl has come to fruition, but we couldn’t stop there. Now these two crucial compilations are available on cassette!

Despite the foreign track names and indigenous delivery, Thai Funk occasionally echoes the familiar motifs of Western pop, rock, and soul acts like Pink Floyd, B.T. Express, and James Brown. Combined with original material filled with ample fuzz guitar, burning organ, funky drumming, and passionate vocals, hitting play on these cassettes opens a musical door that very few in the western world have dared explore. Picture yourself at a seedy Bangkok discotheque in 1979 with your best friends and prepare to party the night away.

Head to LightInTheAttic.net to pick up Thai Funk Vol. 1 & Thai Funk Vol. 2 on cassette (also, available on vinyl)!