Taper (concert)
A taper is a person who records musical events, often from standing microphones in the audience, for the benefit of the musical group's fanbase. Such taping was popularized in the late 1960s and early 1970s by fans of the Grateful Dead.[1] Audio recording was allowed at shows and fans would share their tapes through trade. Taping and trading became a Grateful Dead sub-culture.[2]
Tapers generally do not financially profit from recording such concerts and record using their own equipment with permission from the artist. Taper recordings are commonly considered legal because the recordings are permitted and distribution is free. Taper etiquette strictly excludes bootlegging for profit. "Stealth taper" is a common term for a person who may furtively bring equipment into shows to record without explicit permission.
Although taping is usually done with microphones, often bands will allow plugging into the soundboard for a direct patch. Taping setups are generally portable, operating on high quality condenser microphones, phantom power, a microphone preamplifier and a recording device all of which are battery powered.[3]
A common means of trade is by transferring the tape recording to a lossless digital format such as FLAC and sharing through an internet file share protocol such as BitTorrent with the assistance of a networking service such as etree.
See also
References
- ↑ Michael Getz & John Dwork, The Deadhead's Taping Compendium, Volume 1: An In-Depth Guide to the Music of the Grateful Dead on Tape, 1959–1974, Holt Paperbacks, May 15, 1998, ISBN 0-8050-5847-8
- ↑ Jonathon S. Epstein, Youth Culture: Identity in a Postmodern World, Blackwell Publishing, 1998 ISBN 1-55786-851-4, p 127
- ↑ Paul L. "Pro" Pearson, Ph.D. Setting Levels "The music is what it’s about..." jambands.com May 1999
External links
- DAT-heads – resource for tapers and trading
- TaperSection – forums for tapers
- Archive.org – archive of live music recordings