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   <title><![CDATA[Rascals - The Complete Singles A&#146;s &amp; B&#146;s : One thing I have noticed in recent...]]></title>
   <link>https://top40musiconcd.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=8731&amp;PID=47258&amp;title=rascals-the-complete-singles-as-bs#47258</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="https://top40musiconcd.com/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=38">Paul Haney</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> 8731<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> 23&nbsp;March&nbsp;2017 at 6:00am<br /><br />One thing I have noticed in recent years is the trend of releasing the mono versions of many 1960s hits, especially those with dedicated mono mixes.  Hopefully most, if not all, will eventually see the light of day.]]>
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   <pubDate>Thu, 23 Mar 2017 06:00:16 +0000</pubDate>
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   <title><![CDATA[Rascals - The Complete Singles A&#146;s &amp; B&#146;s :   maciav wrote:1.  Does the same...]]></title>
   <link>https://top40musiconcd.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=8731&amp;PID=47257&amp;title=rascals-the-complete-singles-as-bs#47257</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="https://top40musiconcd.com/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=193">Hykker</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> 8731<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> 23&nbsp;March&nbsp;2017 at 5:36am<br /><br /><table width="99%"><tr><td class="BBquote"><img src="forum_images/quote_box.png" title="Originally posted by maciav" alt="Originally posted by maciav" style="vertical-align: text-bottom;" /> <strong>maciav wrote:</strong><br /><br />1.  Does the same apply for the Stereo-33 <br />singles that were released between 1959 and 1964?  Did <br />they also have a mono counterpart that was always <br />released commercially?</td></tr></table><br /><br />I have a couple dozen or so of these, and all are stereo.  <br />I believe these were mostly targeted towards jukeboxes, <br />most if not all of the ones I own came from a record <br />store that was co-owned with a company that serviced <br />jukeboxes, pinball machines, etc.  I don't ever recall <br />seeing these mini-LPs sold to consumers, but for the most <br />part they pre-date my active record-buying years.<br /><br />The <a href="https://bsnpubs.websitetoolbox.com/" target="_blank">BSN <br />website</a> has a discography of these discs, you do <br />need to be a member in order to access the site.<br /><br /><br /> <table width="99%"><tr><td class="BBquote"><img src="forum_images/quote_box.png" title="Originally posted by Yah Shure" alt="Originally posted by Yah Shure" style="vertical-align: text-bottom;" /> <strong>Yah Shure wrote:</strong><br /><br /><br />I don't think it's that manufacturers don't care about <br />mono, it's just that they cater to wherever they perceive <br />the demand to be, and, aside from the Beatles and other <br />big names, that's likely to be stereo.  Sometimes, it's a <br />matter of what the labels owning the masters do or don't <br />deliver.  Look at what happened with Varese, and their <br />planned mono Buckinghams singles collection CD: Sony <br />dropped the ball and gave them only stereo, when they'd <br />specifically requested mono.  Who knows whether it was <br />because Sony didn't have tape archivists familiar with <br />the mono masters, or because those masters are gone or <br />misplaced, or that someone just didn't want to take the <br />time to dig for the proper tapes?</td></tr></table> <br /><br />From what I read (either here or on BSN) Columbia <br />adamantly refused to allow the mono tapes to be used.  As <br />to why, who knows?<br />]]>
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   <pubDate>Thu, 23 Mar 2017 05:36:49 +0000</pubDate>
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   <title><![CDATA[Rascals - The Complete Singles A&#146;s &amp; B&#146;s : Mike, you&amp;#039;re more than welcome. ...]]></title>
   <link>https://top40musiconcd.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=8731&amp;PID=47256&amp;title=rascals-the-complete-singles-as-bs#47256</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="https://top40musiconcd.com/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=212">Yah Shure</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> 8731<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> 22&nbsp;March&nbsp;2017 at 9:01pm<br /><br />Mike, you're more than welcome.<br />  <br /><table width="99%"><tr><td class="BBquote"><img src="forum_images/quote_box.png" title="Originally posted by maciav" alt="Originally posted by maciav" style="vertical-align: text-bottom;" /> <strong>maciav wrote:</strong><br /><br />1.  Does the same apply for the Stereo-33 singles that were released between 1959 and 1964?  Did they also have a mono counterpart that was always released commercially?</td></tr></table><br /><br />Someone else can probably answer that one, since I never had any compact 33s.  I can't imagine many retailers would have been thrilled with the idea of stocking four different formats for the same hit single, and even the two main labels issuing compact 33s (Columbia and RCA) weren't releasing every single on 7-inch 33s.<br /><br /><br /><table width="99%"><tr><td class="BBquote"><img src="forum_images/quote_box.png" title="Originally posted by maciav" alt="Originally posted by maciav" style="vertical-align: text-bottom;" /> <strong>maciav wrote:</strong><br /><br />2.But anyway, is this version in mono?  At times it sounds mono to me, and at times it sounds stereo: http://www.45cat.com/record/c1045</td></tr></table><br /><br />Mike, that BigBadBluesMan clip <u>is</u> in true stereo, warts and all.  Funny you should mention the Fabian/Avalon <em>The Hit Makers</em> album on Chancellor 5009, because that was the very first rock and roll LP in our household (my sister asked Santa for it; the cover still looks new; the record... not so much.)  It's true that it was only issued in mono, and I can confirm that it is, indeed, just that.  If Jasmine stated that "Why" was taken from that LP, it most certainly would be a mono needledrop... *if* they're being accurate about its source.  It's hard to tell with those public domain outfits.<br /><br />It isn't hard to tell the difference between mono and stereo on this song; you can pick out specific instruments in the left and right channels, with Frankie's voice equally balanced between both channels.  A true mono source would have everything - vocals and instruments - distributed equally between left and right channels.  Only the surface noise, clicks and pops, would sound like they're coming more from one channel or the other, assuming both channels haven't been summed together from a mono vinyl record.<br /><br />For example, on the stereo "Why" clip, the bells during the intro are coming from the left channel.  In true mono, they'd be coming equally from left and right.  BigBadBluesMan didn't help to clarify things: that clip's audio *is* from a stereo 45, but it shows a picture sleeve and the <u>mono</u> 45.  There's another youtube clip showing the mono Chancellor 45 label, but the audio is true stereo.  An <em>American Bandstand</em> clip has Frankie gamely lip-syncing in mono, but the screaming teens are a bit of a distraction. <br /><br /><table width="99%"><tr><td class="BBquote"><img src="forum_images/quote_box.png" title="Originally posted by maciav" alt="Originally posted by maciav" style="vertical-align: text-bottom;" /> <strong>maciav wrote:</strong><br /><br />Why do so many compact disc releases only have the stereo versions available of certain songs, or make it nearly impossible to find them in their mono versions?</td></tr></table><br /><br />Customer expectations, mostly.  Given a choice between mono and stereo, most people will want stereo.  They've been conditioned to hearing their favorite songs in stereo for decades.  Some mono master tapes have been lost or destroyed over the years, some have been damaged, while still others have been sitting in tape vaults, untouched for decades, either because they've been forgotten or that stereo-is-always-better mantra has left them in the dust, so to speak.<br /><br />I don't think it's that manufacturers don't care about mono, it's just that they cater to wherever they perceive the demand to be, and, aside from the Beatles and other big names, that's likely to be stereo.  Sometimes, it's a matter of what the labels owning the masters do or don't deliver.  Look at what happened with Varese, and their planned mono Buckinghams singles collection CD: Sony dropped the ball and gave them only stereo, when they'd specifically requested mono.  Who knows whether it was because Sony didn't have tape archivists familiar with the mono masters, or because those masters are gone or misplaced, or that someone just didn't want to take the time to dig for the proper tapes?<br /><br />As you can see, there really is no one-size-fits-all answer as to why so much mono has gone AWOL over the last couple of decades.<br /><br />I agree with you about "The Battle Of New Orleans":  those cannons have all the impact of a peashooter on the stereo mix.  If you're gonna have a battle, you've gotta have more bass!  ;)<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span style="font-size:10px"><br /><br />Edited by Yah Shure</span>]]>
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   <pubDate>Wed, 22 Mar 2017 21:01:36 +0000</pubDate>
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   <title><![CDATA[Rascals - The Complete Singles A&#146;s &amp; B&#146;s : Yah Shure, Thank you for the time...]]></title>
   <link>https://top40musiconcd.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=8731&amp;PID=47255&amp;title=rascals-the-complete-singles-as-bs#47255</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="https://top40musiconcd.com/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=80">maciav</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> 8731<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> 22&nbsp;March&nbsp;2017 at 4:42pm<br /><br />Yah Shure,<br />Thank you for the time you took to answer my question <br />and explain it in a way that I could finally <br />understand what was happening at the time.  I was born <br />in 1964; therefore, I missed these early stereo <br />records, and I can't visualize what was happening in <br />people's homes regarding their equipment, but now it <br />makes more sense.<br />I am wondering if you could answer a few other <br />questions for me:<br />1.  Does the same apply for the Stereo-33 singles that <br />were released between 1959 and 1964?  Did they also <br />have a mono counterpart that was always released <br />commercially?<br />2.  Thank you for directing me to the website to <br />answer my question regarding "Why."  As a side note, I <br />am probably zooming in on this record because my <br />parents were married on December 26, 1959 when this <br />song would have been topping the charts.  But anyway, <br />is this version in mono?  At times it sounds mono to <br />me, and at times it sounds stereo:  <br />http://www.45cat.com/record/c1045<br />To help you find it, it was posted by BigBadBluesMan <br />(and I hope Pat doesn't mind us posting links from <br />other websites).  I don't know what it is about this <br />record, but it always sounds like it is in stereo to <br />me.  I have it on a Jasmine CD from the U.K. called <br />"The First Five Albums," and the back CD cover says it <br />was taken from "The Hitmakers (With Fabian)" and that <br />it is "Mono Only," but that version also sounds stereo <br />to me.  The link above is about the best example I <br />have heard to convince me I am hearing a mono version, <br />but I am still not 100% sure even from this version. <br />3.  Finally, and this is a dumb "chicken-or-the-egg" <br />question that I could ask any expert on this forum, <br />but since I just missed the early 60s, and since I now <br />know that there were mono 45s available even if a <br />stereo 45 had been released, why do so many compact <br />disc releases only have the stereo versions available <br />of certain songs, or make it nearly impossible to find <br />them in their mono versions.  In addition to "Why," a <br />couple of other examples that I have noticed are "The <br />Battle of New Orleans" by Johnny Horton and some of <br />Connie Francis' records from the early 60s such as "My <br />Heart Has a Mind of Its Own."  I could simply say that <br />the manufacturers don't care about these things like <br />collectors may, but that can't always be the reason <br />either when this phenomenon occurs scores of times for <br />scores of songs.  I know there is probably not a <br />definitive answer, and you probably only have a hunch <br />or a guess, but I am just curious what you think.<br />Thanks again for helping me to understand the history <br />of stereo and mono 45 releases back when everything <br />started.]]>
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   <pubDate>Wed, 22 Mar 2017 16:42:33 +0000</pubDate>
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   <title><![CDATA[Rascals - The Complete Singles A&#146;s &amp; B&#146;s :   Yah Shure wrote:Mike, yes,...]]></title>
   <link>https://top40musiconcd.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=8731&amp;PID=47254&amp;title=rascals-the-complete-singles-as-bs#47254</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="https://top40musiconcd.com/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=80">maciav</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> 8731<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> 22&nbsp;March&nbsp;2017 at 3:39pm<br /><br /> <table width="99%"><tr><td class="BBquote"><img src="forum_images/quote_box.png" title="Originally posted by Yah Shure" alt="Originally posted by Yah Shure" style="vertical-align: text-bottom;" /> <strong>Yah Shure wrote:</strong><br /><br />Mike, yes, any new release stereo <br />45 during that time would have been in tandem with a <br />mono 45, and here's why (Frankie Avalon pun <br />unintended):  Stereo records played with mono phono <br />cartridges at the turn of the '60s would have been <br />chewed to bits, as those carts were not physically <br />capable of tracking these records without inflicting <br />severe damage on them.  Few grown-ups had stereo <br />phonographs at the time - not surprising, considering <br />how new the technology was - and even fewer teenagers <br />could afford such luxuries.<br /><br />Case in point: my folks had the 78 RPM turntable in <br />the living room's old Crosley hi fi refitted with a <br />new stereo cartridge-equipped Voice Of Music automatic <br />changer in 1959.  Even so, the fi stayed hi, not <br />stereo, since the point of the upgrade was so that we <br />could play LPs and 45s without them sounding like the <br />Chipmunks on helium.  Stereo wasn't even a part of the <br />equation.  My sibs and I didn't get our own stereo <br />phonograph until 1963, at which point the stereo <br />gloves officially came off. ;)&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br /><br />If a major hit like "Why" had been only released in <br />stereo, record dealers across the country would have <br />heard from boatloads of angry customers that their 45s <br />had been mauled on the first playing.  Mono 45s were <br />compatible with both mono and stereo cartridges, but <br />stereo 45s were only playable with stereo cartridges.  <br />From a retail standpoint, it would have been a <br />disaster to release only a stereo 45 of a hot title.  <br />Making a 45 available exclusively in a format that was <br />incompatible with the equipment of 99% or more of <br />those customers who bought it would have made no sense <br />whatsoever.<br /><br />As a result, "Why" was issued in both configurations.  <br />In this particular case, Chancellor made things rather <br />confusing by utilizing the same catalog number on <br />both: C1045, unlike some of their other "SC" <br />designations for stereo 45s.  You can see both formats <br />on 45cat.com.  Do a search for Frankie Avalon, then <br />click on the blue part of the link that says "Best <br />match is <strong>Artist - Frankie Avalon</strong> (xxx <br />records)."  It'll come up with Frankie's USA 45s <br />(there'll be other country tabs at the top); scroll <br />down a ways and you'll see a picture sleeve of "Why" <br />(the mono 45) and directly under it will be a label <br />scan of the stereo 45.  Click on both listings and <br />have a look around.  As you'll see, there are a <br />multitude of label variations for the mono 45, largely <br />due to the various independent plants that pressed the <br />record. By contrast, there's only the one stereo 45 <br />label posted.  That's because the mono 45 vastly <br />outsold the stereo 45 of this #1 hit.  I wouldn't be <br />surprised if the stereo 45 pressing amounted to a <br />comparatively small run at just one plant.<br /><br />Hope this helps!&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br /><br /><br /><br /></td></tr></table> ]]>
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   <pubDate>Wed, 22 Mar 2017 15:39:34 +0000</pubDate>
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   <title><![CDATA[Rascals - The Complete Singles A&#146;s &amp; B&#146;s :   Tunestony wrote:Just grabbed...]]></title>
   <link>https://top40musiconcd.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=8731&amp;PID=47249&amp;title=rascals-the-complete-singles-as-bs#47249</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="https://top40musiconcd.com/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=47">Steve Carras</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> 8731<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> 21&nbsp;March&nbsp;2017 at 6:04pm<br /><br /> <table width="99%"><tr><td class="BBquote"><img src="forum_images/quote_box.png" title="Originally posted by Tunestony" alt="Originally posted by Tunestony" style="vertical-align: text-bottom;" /> <strong>Tunestony wrote:</strong><br /><br />Just grabbed another great singles collection from Real Gone.  This one has an <br />oddity though.  Right smack in the middle of mono versions, there's a stereo <br />mix of "A Beautiful Morning."  I checked my copy, and indeed, it is stereo...a <br />little early for stereo, 1968, don't you think?<br /><br />But, here's the crazy part:  the label lists it as "compatible mono - stereo" <br />when, in fact, it's stereo.  Odd...<br /><br />We learn in the liner notes that there's a different harmonica part on the mono <br />vs. stereo of "Groovin" as well.  <br /><br />...and sorry, I can't figure out how to post a picture from my local computer <br />(not on the web).</td></tr></table> <br /><br />Welcome from me,too,Tony!]]>
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   <pubDate>Tue, 21 Mar 2017 18:04:49 +0000</pubDate>
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   <title><![CDATA[Rascals - The Complete Singles A&#146;s &amp; B&#146;s : ...and sorry, I can&amp;#039;t figure...]]></title>
   <link>https://top40musiconcd.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=8731&amp;PID=47246&amp;title=rascals-the-complete-singles-as-bs#47246</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="https://top40musiconcd.com/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=649">Smokin' TomGary</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> 8731<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> 21&nbsp;March&nbsp;2017 at 3:55pm<br /><br />...and sorry, I can't figure out how<br />to post a picture from my local computer (not on the<br />web).<br /><br />First, save your image to an image file sharing site like http;//imgur.com<br />Second, upload the image<br />Third, Copy the URL in the box<br />Fourth, when Replying here click on the right hand most box just under "Color" and paste in the URL.<br /><br />As an example I post an image of the Rascals GH LP.<br /><br />http://imgur.com/a/r5RGY<span style="font-size:10px"><br /><br />Edited by Smokin' TomGary</span>]]>
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   <pubDate>Tue, 21 Mar 2017 15:55:15 +0000</pubDate>
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   <title><![CDATA[Rascals - The Complete Singles A&#146;s &amp; B&#146;s : Mike, yes, any new release stereo...]]></title>
   <link>https://top40musiconcd.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=8731&amp;PID=47245&amp;title=rascals-the-complete-singles-as-bs#47245</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="https://top40musiconcd.com/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=212">Yah Shure</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> 8731<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> 21&nbsp;March&nbsp;2017 at 2:20pm<br /><br />Mike, yes, any new release stereo 45 during that time would have been in tandem with a mono 45, and here's why (Frankie Avalon pun unintended):  Stereo records played with mono phono cartridges at the turn of the '60s would have been chewed to bits, as those carts were not physically capable of tracking these records without inflicting severe damage on them.  Few grown-ups had stereo phonographs at the time - not surprising, considering how new the technology was - and even fewer teenagers could afford such luxuries.<br /><br />Case in point: my folks had the 78 RPM turntable in the living room's old Crosley hi fi refitted with a new stereo cartridge-equipped Voice Of Music automatic changer in 1959.  Even so, the fi stayed hi, not stereo, since the point of the upgrade was so that we could play LPs and 45s without them sounding like the Chipmunks on helium.  Stereo wasn't even a part of the equation.  My sibs and I didn't get our own stereo phonograph until 1963, at which point the stereo gloves officially came off. ;)&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br /><br />If a major hit like "Why" had been only released in stereo, record dealers across the country would have heard from boatloads of angry customers that their 45s had been mauled on the first playing.  Mono 45s were compatible with both mono and stereo cartridges, but stereo 45s were only playable with stereo cartridges.  From a retail standpoint, it would have been a disaster to release only a stereo 45 of a hot title.  Making a 45 available exclusively in a format that was incompatible with the equipment of 99% or more of those customers who bought it would have made no sense whatsoever.<br /><br />As a result, "Why" was issued in both configurations.  In this particular case, Chancellor made things rather confusing by utilizing the same catalog number on both: C1045, unlike some of their other "SC" designations for stereo 45s.  You can see both formats on 45cat.com.  Do a search for Frankie Avalon, then click on the blue part of the link that says "Best match is <strong>Artist - Frankie Avalon</strong> (xxx records)."  It'll come up with Frankie's USA 45s (there'll be other country tabs at the top); scroll down a ways and you'll see a picture sleeve of "Why" (the mono 45) and directly under it will be a label scan of the stereo 45.  Click on both listings and have a look around.  As you'll see, there are a multitude of label variations for the mono 45, largely due to the various independent plants that pressed the record. By contrast, there's only the one stereo 45 label posted.  That's because the mono 45 vastly outsold the stereo 45 of this #1 hit.  I wouldn't be surprised if the stereo 45 pressing amounted to a comparatively small run at just one plant.<br /><br />Hope this helps!&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br /><br /><br /><br />]]>
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   <pubDate>Tue, 21 Mar 2017 14:20:48 +0000</pubDate>
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   <title><![CDATA[Rascals - The Complete Singles A&#146;s &amp; B&#146;s : Hello Yah Shure. Are you saying...]]></title>
   <link>https://top40musiconcd.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=8731&amp;PID=47244&amp;title=rascals-the-complete-singles-as-bs#47244</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="https://top40musiconcd.com/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=80">maciav</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> 8731<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> 21&nbsp;March&nbsp;2017 at 10:43am<br /><br />Hello Yah Shure.<br />Are you saying all commercial stereo 45 versions from <br />the late 50s and early 60s also had a mono version <br />that was sold commercially?  I had been trying to <br />determine the answer to this question for years, and I <br />had finally given up and just assumed that some <br />singles from that time period were only released in <br />stereo.  However, your post implies otherwise when it <br />says one of the reasons stereo singles had difficulty <br />taking off at that time was the wider availability of <br />the cheaper mono versions.  An example that I am <br />curious about would be "Why" by Frankie Avalon.  I had <br />assumed that it was only released by Chancellor <br />Records in stereo.  Was there in fact a mono 45 that <br />was also released for "Why," and was there indeed a <br />mono 45 that was always released during these years of <br />the stereo 45's infancy?  I am not talking about a <br />separate mono mix, a mono LP version, or a mono <br />promotional 45.  I am talking about two separate 45s <br />being released in tandem in every instance a stereo <br />single was commercially released -- one in stereo and <br />one in mono between the approximate time period of <br />1958 and 1961.<br />Thanks for your help.]]>
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   <pubDate>Tue, 21 Mar 2017 10:43:16 +0000</pubDate>
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   <title><![CDATA[Rascals - The Complete Singles A&#146;s &amp; B&#146;s :   Yah Shure wrote:  Tunestony...]]></title>
   <link>https://top40musiconcd.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=8731&amp;PID=47243&amp;title=rascals-the-complete-singles-as-bs#47243</link>
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    <![CDATA[<strong>Author:</strong> <a href="https://top40musiconcd.com/forum/member_profile.asp?PF=80">maciav</a><br /><strong>Subject:</strong> 8731<br /><strong>Posted:</strong> 21&nbsp;March&nbsp;2017 at 10:22am<br /><br /> <table width="99%"><tr><td class="BBquote"><img src="forum_images/quote_box.png" title="Originally posted by Yah Shure" alt="Originally posted by Yah Shure" style="vertical-align: text-bottom;" /> <strong>Yah Shure wrote:</strong><br /><br /><table width="99%"><tr><td class="BBquote"><img src="forum_images/quote_box.png" title="Originally posted by Tunestony" alt="Originally posted by Tunestony" style="vertical-align: text-bottom;" /> <strong>Tunestony wrote:</strong><br /><br />the label lists it <br />as "compatible mono - stereo" when, in fact, it's <br />stereo.  Odd...</td></tr></table><br /><br />Hi, Tony!  The label says "COMPATIBLE MONO <u>&</u> <br />STEREO."  Since modern cartridges were becoming more <br />widely available in phonographs in 1968, that was a <br />reassurance that the 45 could be played on both mono <br />and stereo phonographs equipped with such cartridges, <br />without any worry of damaging the record.  In previous <br />years (late '50s to mid '60s), most stereo albums <br />contained warnings on the back to play the record only <br />on phonographs equipped with stereo cartridges, since <br />playing it with a mono cartridge back then would cause <br />permanent groove damage.  Buddah also issued a few <br />stereo singles that year, designated "'Dual 45' <br />Playable Stereo As Well As Mono" on the label.<br /><br />1968 was the first year of stereo 45s v.2; check <br />around for other threads on the board which discuss <br />this.  The first stereo 45s came out in the late '50s, <br />but they faced three major obstacles at the time: they <br />weren't widely available, cost more than the mono 45 <br />of that same  title (which <em>was</em> widely <br />available), and the number of stereo phonographs on <br />which to play them was comparatively small.  The <br />format fizzled, and would not be revived until nearly <br />a decade later, beginning with a few promo 45s (and <br />one or two likely erroneously-pressed commercial ones) <br />in 1967 and commercial 45s in early 1968.<br /><br />"A Beautiful Morning" was also encoded using the <br />Haeco-CSG process, which was designed to make stereo <br />records more compatible with mono playback systems.  <br />While that may have worked on making the records sound <br />more balanced on a mono player or on AM radio, it <br />adversely affected the stereo playback.  Do a search <br />on "CSG" and you'll find several threads that go into <br />further detail.  Fortunately, the CSG process was <br />never widespread, and gradually disappeared by the end <br />of the '70s.<br /><br />It took several years for stereo 45s to become <br />commonplace after 1968, so the isolated Rascals CSG <br />stereo single isn't as unusual as you might think.  It <br />was a gradual transition, and not at all consistent, <br />even within the same labels.<br /><br /><table width="99%"><tr><td class="BBquote"><img src="forum_images/quote_box.png" title="Originally posted by Tunestony" alt="Originally posted by Tunestony" style="vertical-align: text-bottom;" /> <strong>Tunestony wrote:</strong><br /><br />...and sorry, I can't figure out how <br />to post a picture from my local computer (not on the <br />web).</td></tr></table><br /><br />Perhaps that's just as well, since there isn't much <br />need for that here anymore.  Sites that host tons of <br />label scans, like 45cat and discogs, were still in <br />their infancy when the handful of photos you see here <br />were originally posted.  More importantly, those <br />photos eat up bandwidth, and Pat asked long ago that <br />we no longer post them.</td></tr></table> ]]>
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   <pubDate>Tue, 21 Mar 2017 10:22:11 +0000</pubDate>
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