Direct mp3 download or play: Harry To The Ferry
This is the original recording from 1970 or 1971 as heard on the Negativland album “Points.” It features my mother playing accordion and my aunt singing. The voices of my father and a cousin can also be heard. This is part of a college drinking song from Cal Berkeley and you can go here to see more information about this song. I used a Calrad 500c dual crystal microphone for my aunt and a Calrad DM-59HL dynamic microphone for my mother. Separation was about 25 feet with my mother in the kitchen and my aunt in the living room at my house in Martinez, California. The tape recorder was a Sony 560D running at three and three quarters inches per second, which my father recently purchased from White Front on Contra Costa Boulevard in Pleasant Hill, California. There is a little distortion on the side where my aunt is singing which is most likely due to the mike preamp in the recorder being overdriven by the Calrad crystal microphone.
In addition, the Calrad 500c has what I think is a cult following, as it is used as a “dummy” microphone on infomercials and it seems to be somewhat collectible as seen in this link. I bought mine in the late sixties for ten dollars from the now defunct Olson Electronics.
Calrad 500c Dual Crystal
Calrad DM-59 HL Dynamic
Sony TC-560D Instruction Manual
3 users commented on " Harry To The Ferry "
Follow-up comment rss or Leave a TrackbackHey, glad to hear your feeling better; and I hope the rest of the house inhabitants are doing well too.
These microphones look like new, what’s your secrete? People want to know how you preserved your magnetic tapes all these years before digitizing them.
By a weird coincidence, I came over to look at your web site while listening to the first track of “Points”, which I just re-ripped to MP3 from CD…
Do you have any pictures or recordings of your parakeets? We just got a darn ‘keet of our own, and I’d be intrigued to see what Green Boy and Blue Boy look(ed) like. Our ‘keet is now sitting next to my laptop, tweeting along to “The Answer Is…”
I think that one of the pictures in the SLIDESHOW (in the far left hand column on this page) has an image of one of David’s ‘keets.