![]() ![]() You can find it here, and also in the links, to the right. Additionally, OldRadios90 shared that he has added more recordings to his page, which is an extremely worthwhile visit. In other helpful comments, "Snoopy" has figured out that the second Jesse Coopwood tape heard here is from September 9th, 1951, an anonymous commenter has identified that the audio letter I shared in that same post was recorded about 19 years later, on September 24th, 1970 (see those comments, as well, for more information), and my Star Ads loving pal, Larry, caught something I missed, which is that Kenny Biggs, in this post, gave the date of the recording, at least for part one of the tape, as being yet another September date, in this case, September 16th, 1965.įinally, frequent participant "OldRadios90" wrote in to say that he'd acquired one of what he says were "The first battery operated Solid State Recorders", the Steelman Transitape, which you can see here. The posts are here and here, and you can find the names of the tracks in the comments of each post. It seems that they were both from a Capitol series of production music called the Hi-"Q" stock music library. Schad has very helpfully put names to two different tapes I featured in two different posts. ![]() I'm still catching up on a lot of things, so I'm going to feature another of my "Blowout Posts", with a dozen offerings and, for the most part, very little in the way of explanation.īut first, I want to review a few comments. I want your buying experience to be a good one.Last month proved very busy, to the point that, for the first time in over 18 months, I only posted once that month. If you have any problems with the item you purchased, please contact me before leaving a negative feedback. I will leave feedback on each buyer and I hope that each buyer will leave feedback on the service they received from me. If you wish a service other than the one I offer, please let me know.I do provide combined shipping on items that can safely be shipped together.Handling fees are sometimes added for difficulty/fragile items.Star Rating:My goal is to offer you quality customer service.I hope that I can provide the service that generated thoughtful and meaningful ratings from my buyers.Feedback:Feedback is very important to the eBay community. I use eBay’s Shipping Calculator to determine the costs for your ZIP code. Postal Service including automatic tracking. I only use PayPal as a payment choice.Shipping: I will ship within 24 hours of receipt of payment on normal business days using the U.S. Hi-Q was released by Capitol on both a series of 12” phonographic records and a set of open-reelaudiotapes as well.Note from theseller: All items are from a smoke/animal free environment.Payment: Sign up forPayPal the fast, easy, and secure way to pay online. It was used in movies, cartoons, and television shows and countless other productions have also used cues from the Hi-Q library. Please review photos as they are part of the description.From the Internet: Hi-Qwas a brand and library of production music (sound tracks, cues, background music, etc) produced and distributed by Capitol Records in the late 1940s and early 1970s. Condition: Very good to excellent, very minor marks, printing is very clear. There are several pages that look like Addendum pages – both Index and specific pages. Inside are more than 100 pages that are tabbed (Light, Melodic, Dramatic, Short Cue, Specialized) and a Cross Index. It comes in a heavy black plastic covered 3-ring binder that measures 7x9 inches. There is no date or other printing information. Vintage Capitol Records HI-Q Catalog Soundtracks Production Music This sale is for a metal ringed notebook titled: Capitol Custom, Capitol HI-Q Catalog, Capitol Records, Inc. ![]()
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