Tape Project-Any reason so many tapes are showing


Why are so many Tape Project tapes showing up for sale on A-gon? So far I have seen at least three full lots of tapes appear up for sale, and remainder of subscriptions are also being offered.

My reason for not joining is because of the amount of tapes I would need to purchase with music that I am not interested in.

I dont think it's the quality of the music/tape transfer. I did purchase four tapes from a fellow goner and played them on my Studer A-810 with excellent results. The Studer needs to be re-calibrated and the Tape Project tapes still sounded incredible. So from my own experience these are first class master tapes.
I personally feel the Studer A-810 is the only way to go if you want to get the most benefit from Tape Project. Unless of course you are in the position to purchase an Ampex 102.

Is it economics that these tapes and subscriptions are starting to show up for sale or is it that maybe the tapes are not all that big of a deal sound/quality for the money?

Curious as to what others are feeling about Tape Project?

Ed
apachef1
Ed,

i think you are not alone in your perspective on Jazz titles. there are 'rock' guys who want more classic Rock, Jazz guys like you, and hard core Classical guys......personally i like e'm all and actually look forward to expanding my musical hoizons. there is no wrong perspectives on music choices. and people moving in and out of tapes is normal.....and that happens for many different reasons.

the following is a quote from DocB (Dan Schmalle) from the Tape Project Forum.

I'm not a member over there so I'll add my comments here and folks can take them there if they wish. Three sets of tapes is 1.5% of our total licensed production capability of 200 copies (of which we don't have very many Series One titles left available). I don't think that is a particularly significant fraction in terms of being able to determine why the tapes are being sold. The simple fact is the economic crunch affected a lot of folks - though we seem to be coming out of that and subscriptions are really up lately. Earlier in the year we had very remorseful calls from a few Charter subscribers who were in financial straights and who could not renew for Series Two, and I can imagine those same folks might be the ones who were selling their Series One tapes.

so the selling of a few tapes on the goN is pretty much a normal occurance.

the big issue here is that if we are serious about allowing RTR to develop as an 'ultimate' format then all us tape-heads must support The Tape Project as best we can until the musical selections expand enough to become viable. once there are 30-40 titles out there then more fence-sitters will join in and the momentum The Tape Project began can sustain itself. we need a larger core of people wanting to hear the best possible sounding tapes. we don't need 2000 people, but 500--1000 would be enough that the various types of music will be reasonably represented and a person can get into tape and have the music that they want.

i think we are damn lucky that a group of people made the commitment to create The Tape Project. there is zero chance i would have got into RTR without them. to me it enriches our hobby having licensed legal master tapes you can buy and listen to.
Times are tight and discretionary spending is way down - tapes are probably being sold because some people need the cash. As far as the quality of the TP tapes, they are superb (I am a first series subscriber)and the sound shines through on any 15/2 machine you play them on. You don't have to go crazy or spend lots of $$ with the playback unit. I mostly use an OTARI MTR-12 that I picked up from a NYC jingle studio for $250, had an EE friend go over it, and paid him $100. The machine may not have the pedigree, but the overall sound blows away most any SACD, CD, or vinyl I have.
I'm glad to see the support for Tape Project. I just happen to notice in the last few weeks that the tapes were showing up and I never thought there would be a chance to purchase a few without a subscription given the very limited production run.

I'm technically a subscriber as I did take over another members remaining second year subscription. Just kind of back doored my way in to it

This was a great idea and I do look forward to year three's offerings. I will most likely sign up directly

Good listening

Ed
I purchased a few Tape Project tapes to see what all the hype was about. I'd say... they're O'kay. I wasn't blown away. I can make much better tapes in my own studio... but then again, I don't mass produce them like they do. I can take a day to prepare the decks, set levels, calibrate and make multiple runs to make sure the best copy is available. Most people that have heard these tapes were very impressed. As Mike says... if more people pull out their wallets and support ventures such as "The Tape Project", you'll see more mainstream releases. Money talks.
Disclaimer - I am a Tapeproject subscriber (series 1 and 2) and I do not consider selling my tapes!

But I accept hifi is a not a rational hobby - otherwise I would still keep my old ESL63 - ARC SP8 - D70 - Oracle system. There are many reasons for someone selling his tapes, but mainly the old "La dona (and the audiophile) e mobile". Our interests change a lot. As Don stated the fraction which appeared for sale at Audiogon is very low, and using google I could find that most of it sold fast at almost new price, something unusual with hifi items.