Direct mp3 download or play: The Poppy Seed Tape
This is the original recording, which was transcribed and used as an insert for the first Negativland release “Negativland” in 1980. Keep in mind it was not recorded and only presented as printed material. Also the recording actually starts after the dotted line and then goes to bottom of the page, then jumps to the top of the page and ends with “Ehh-hemm,” which is my grandmother clearing her throat. At the time, we felt the text would look better if it was rearranged. If you would like to follow the text with the recording click on the text to get a larger, clearer image. The other side of the same insert has the “Coffee Desserts” recipe.
I made this recording in the early 1970s on my Norelco 1530 cassette recorder, most likely using the dynamic microphone supplied with this machine. The quality is somewhat poor, mainly because of something this recorder was doing before I realized it was happening. Quite often I would set the controls in ‘record’ and ‘pause’ at the same time to check the record level without rolling the tape, and I would do this anywhere on the tape including parts I had already recorded. Little did I know, doing that would make a noise where the record head was resting on the tape. I realize now the record head was operating and recording even when the tape was not moving.
6 users commented on " The Poppy Seed Tape "
Follow-up comment rss or Leave a TrackbackThat’s great! I always wondered if that was a recording, based on the audio-verite nature of the transcription.
Thanks for sharing that!
I wonder if people record themselves just doing ordinary things anymore?
I think when tape recorders were becoming cheaper and somewhat ubiquitous, there was this novelty of recording your friends and family. I imaging that phenomenon has migrated to YouTube. I used to buy tapes at thrift stores if I had a hunch that it had someone’s homespun recording on it. More often than not, it wouldn’t, but would occasionally find something worthwhile. I also noticed that there were a lot of open-reel 1/4″ tapes out there where someone – in the pre-VCR era – would audio tape their favorite television shows. I once found some tapes from what was probably the early Sixties that had a lot of music programs. Unfortunately, there would be this screech every time the person toggled the pause control in order to avoid recording the commercials.
For years I’ve been making tape recordings of my old friends and I hanging out when I go home on vacation. I usually edit them, then make CDR’s after I get home.
I started making “friend” tapes when I was 12, and recently converted all the surviving ones to CDR.
I never used much besides and old tape recorder I got from my aunt when she was cleaning out her apartment, and a Sony Dictaphone to make these tapes.
Just a hobby I enjoyed doing.
Glad to see this finally up, David! It’s never been heard by the public before.
By the way, the “Coffee Desserts” recipe is something my Mom occasionally made for me, my brother, and the rest of Negativland, to eat on special occasions.
And I just thought of something else – I am pretty sure that this tape was the first recording I ever heard of David’s unusual family (well, it was either this or “The Scrabble Tape”). I typed it up in my high-school senior year art class as a project, not to use in our record ( that wasn’t even made yet), but simply because I thought it was so darn strange. I’d never heard anything like it!
I like how it sounds. Poor quality gives it that authentic feeling, you know?
Here’s another picture of the Norelco 1530 cassette recorder, the model used for this tape.