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mjb50
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Posted: 29 September 2023 at 11:02pm | IP Logged Quote mjb50

I saw an interesting question on Discogs:

Quote:
I've got a promo CD I'm submitting with "Intro/:07/2:49/fade" listed for the 3 versions of the track. I understand that it means that there are 7 seconds of instrumental at the beginning of the track, that the track is 2:49 in length, and that there's a faded ending. This allows the DJ to talk over the track and what the ending of the song is like, so they can plan accordingly.

I've also seen endings on other items listed as "sustain" or "cold", which are pretty obvious.

I've also seen remix service releases with extensive notes about how many beats there are at the beginning and ending of a track, and where a DJ can mix in and out of a track.

What do you call these notes? Is there a standard term?

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AdvprosD
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Posted: 01 October 2023 at 11:02am | IP Logged Quote AdvprosD

I'm not fully getting the gist of the question I don't think. However, I'm going to take a guess and quote one of my old remix services, "Powerhouse" and see
if this is at least close. On a number of those discs was the bold claim of the tracks having exclusive "Riding 32 beats." Though I never in recent days have
seen anything like this come up in conversation, I've seen other services use 16, 32 and 64 beats in that way. I really don't know if there ever was a standard.

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mjb50
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Posted: 01 October 2023 at 12:32pm | IP Logged Quote mjb50

Heh, well, the question is what people in the record & radio industry would call that data. Like if someone at a radio station asked you what that label text says, they might say "go look at that record and tell me what the programming cues are". I am just making up that term, though ("programming cues"). Does it have a name?
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eriejwg
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Posted: 01 October 2023 at 3:05pm | IP Logged Quote eriejwg

Working back in the radio business when our music was on
cartridges, that type of info would lead me to believe it
is a 7 second intro before the first vocal of the song
starts, the song has a run time of 2:49 and the type of
ending of the song is a fade out. Exactly as you had stated
in your first sentence.

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Hykker
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Posted: 02 October 2023 at 3:46am | IP Logged Quote Hykker

eriejwg wrote:
Working back in the radio business when our music was on
cartridges, that type of info would lead me to believe it
is a 7 second intro before the first vocal of the song
starts, the song has a run time of 2:49 and the type of
ending of the song is a fade out. Exactly as you had stated
in your first sentence.


Expanding on that a bit, the "2:49" was the point where you would play the next event...not necessarily the end of the audio in a song with a fade
ending, but a point where the fade-out was established. Obviously, with a cold ending it would be the end of the song. Every station I worked at
referred to a sustained note ending as a "cool" ending, but this may have been a regional thing.

Additionally, there may be multiple intro times listed on some songs, usually labeled as :03/:10/2:47/C. The multiple "posts" in the intro marking a
notable change, be it a guitar kicking in, a "woo!" or something else the DJ might want to be aware of.
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crapfromthepast
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Posted: 02 October 2023 at 5:05am | IP Logged Quote crapfromthepast

But going back to the original question, of what do you actually call the notation of ":03/:10/2:47/C"?

I don't know.

I've never heard anyone describe the actual notation by a name or phrase.

It's just that thing that you write in china marker on the label of the promo 45 or the jewel box of the promo CD single.

It's pretty well standardized, for sure, but it doesn't have a name.

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Paul Haney
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Posted: 02 October 2023 at 5:46am | IP Logged Quote Paul Haney

I agree with Ron. There is no "official" terminology, we always just called it "writing notes on the label."
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CountryPD
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Posted: 02 October 2023 at 7:01am | IP Logged Quote CountryPD

I always referred to them as "timing labels"

For those that never worked in radio, back in the days of playing
45's on the air I cut file folder labels in half and typed the tempo,
intro time(s), total time of the recording and the type of ending. I
placed the label at the top of the 45 generally covering the
record label logo so as to not to obscure the song title, artist,
songwriter or other label info.

Here's how I labeled them:

Tempo: two letters separated by a slash [/] as some songs
were not just slow, medium or fast. S/S, S/M, M/M, M/F, F/F

Intro: instrumental time before vocal begins. Might include
two numbers if there was more than one post to hit in the case
of a long instrumental intro. If the song began with a vocal and
without an instrumental intro it was designated as :00
underlined in bold type.

Total time: tracked each record with a timer to obtain
accurate time as many of the record labels contain incorrect
timing info. Needed an accurate time when backtiming to a
newscast or a hard break set for a specific exact time.

Ending: could be a fade, cold (definite ending) or a
cold/fade (definite ending but the final note(s) have a long
sustain) A definite but abrupt ending would be "cold" with an
exclamation point [COLD!]

Example of a label:

F/F    :09       2:35
                    FADE

File folder labels with different colors were used to designate
different categories for records. We used three colors for our
current rotations [high, medium, low] and another color for
recurrent. Prior to computer music scheduling records were
manually rotated within stacks from front to back so different
colors were necessary to designate their category.

Oldies had plain white timing labels with a second small sticker
designating their category by various letters [A, B, C, etc.]

When we transitioned to playing music from broadcast tape
cartridges the same designations were typed on the file folder
label placed on the edge of the tape cartridge.
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AdvprosD
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Posted: 02 October 2023 at 10:06am | IP Logged Quote AdvprosD

("programming cues")

That seems to work for me. I see I was pretty much off the question.

Are we able to do voting in this forum? :)


Dave

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Paul Haney
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Posted: 02 October 2023 at 10:06am | IP Logged Quote Paul Haney

At one station I worked at, we had the entire on-air library on 3x5 index cards and the pertinent info was on each card (the
station owner didn't want to deface the record labels). Of course, when I got there I added the relevant chart info
(including peak position), using my RR book. After you played the record, it was filed back in the library (A-Z by artist)
and the card was put at the end of the stack in the box that held the cards.
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