I'd have been lost without mine. All my cassettes were badged up in this way. And as I was precious about not writing on the inlay card (all my tapes were logged in a liberated exercise book from school) it was the main means of cassette identification. As you can see from this Damned C90 (their first album borrowed from Riggsby and dubbed, plus an interview they did on the radio back in the day) the unique number (28) it was given meant I could locate it in a heartbeat. In addition to all this vital* data, my exercise book also contained each track meticulously catalogued and searchable from the tape counter log ('New Rose' [525-614]) - this meant I could skip between tracks. Invaluable on Beatles albums when faced with the ubiquitous Ringo track. God, just writing this and I can see that the 15 year old me must have had way too much time on his hands.
In a house move a few years back I condensed my cassette collection down from over a hundred to just a select ten - the Crown Jewels, if you will. They and the 50 year old exercise book still reside in the bottom of a packing case somewhere in my garage. One of my Summer jobs will be (and I've been saying this since we moved into this house seven years ago) to retrieve them and reacquaint them with my Damned tape which somehow avoided being lost in the bottom of a removals chest. Watch this space for Time Team updates.
* Vital to me and precisely nobody else.
Cataloguing systems that no one else understands are vital for a music collection
ReplyDeleteI know what you mean. Back then I was just writing stuff in a book; I had no idea I was doing anything so grand as 'cataloguing'. Also, I had no idea that it wasn't just the music I was obsessing over - numbers and calligraphy would follow me all the way thru my life.
DeleteThat was quite a cataloguing (or 'writing in a book'!) system you had there, I've never known anyone who didn't write on the inlay card. It was always a challenge, having to squeeze in so much in so little space, but for me very much part of the whole process.
ReplyDeleteAs for the Dymo machine - well, I had Dymo envy, as I never had one but one of my best friends did and she did let me play with it from time to time - it seemed almost magical.
I think the main reason I shied away from writing on the inlay cards was finance: I didn't have a money tree at the end of the garden (still don't, funnily enough) and my meagre pocket money would only go so far - just a few cassettes in the 'early years'. Consequently I was forever recording over them - again and again (until they snapped, BASF always snapped.) Chart show tapes were cannon fodder - sent in to battle every week recording over previous chart shows who had fought so valiantly before them. So I never wrote on the damned things. It wasn't till the 80s that I popped my cherry. And then trying to find biros that didn't leak/run. Nightmare! Anyway, I'm rambling. Does that answer your question? Oh, you didn't ask a question! Sorry, C.
DeleteI got very excited reading about that exercise book and cataloguing system, John. I never had a dymo machine, but I had lots of home made catalogues...
ReplyDeleteWe plough a similar, sometimes lonely, furrow, Rol. I can't believe I'm the only one round here who had a Dymo.
DeleteI'm trying to think now where it would have come from. I've got a feeling dad may have raided the stationery cupboard at work.
Ah, the Dymo. There are dimly lit corners of my LP (and, yes, cassette) collection that still betray my brief addiction to that magical gizmo.
ReplyDeleteI knew you wouldn't let me down, TS! I'm seriously thinking about getting a new one. Or a new old one, probably. I can only remember red tape - were there other colours?
DeleteBlue I think
DeleteThanks, CC. Right, I've taken the plunge: I ordered a (brand) new gizmo on eBay last night. It comes with various coloured tape. Watch this space for further Dymo action!
DeleteMy daughter has a Dymo she bought not that long ago and uses it regularly for labelling boxes of all sizes - definitely doesn't have cassette tapes.
ReplyDeleteMy cassette tape inlay card wasn't written on either! All my cassettes had a new inlay cut from the same shade of pale green card with the album name/artist written in black calligraphy on the front and along the side. I would never have identified the name of all the songs on the albums though - you were dedicated.
I'm bound to ask, do any of them still survive? (If so, I think you should share them with us over at your place.)
Delete