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Gm aftermarket analog tapedeck
Gm aftermarket analog tapedeck













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“What’s done is done,” he replied, “Now you’ve got tunes, dude!”

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“Let’s install it tonight!” I was horrified, but what could I do? Rat off my best friend to The Man? I told him he was an asshole. Next day at school, filled with pride, he handed me a paper bag containing the stereo. Dressed all in black, including ski mask- he was on a mission, you see- he coat-hangered his way into the car and spent hours silently dismantling the dash and removing the Realistic cassette deck. This decisive action consisted of Sick Dog ripping off the cassette deck from a Capri II owned by a young woman who lived next door he believed that she had once called the cops on him for doing bleach burnouts in his (six-cylinder) ’68 Mustang and thus deserved to get her Capri de-stereo-ized. So maybe my Fugazi/Young MC mix isn’t so weird after all.I figured something would come up, but my friend “Sick Dog” (second from left in the yearbook photo of my crypto-Baja-ized ’58 Beetle, above) couldn’t stand riding in my car and being forced to listen to “Kill The Poor” through a warbly-ass 8-track adapter and decided to take decisive action. The first mixtapes were made by DJs and garage bands. Both hip-hop and hardcore punk found new audiences thanks to the relative ease and affordability of recording and copying a cassette tape. Music geeks might notice an overlap in the proliferation of the tape deck and the spread of genres previously kept underground. GM first offered a cassette deck in 1979, according to historian Kathleen Adelson from the GM Heritage Center. A few manufacturers, notably Mercedes and Chrysler, adopted the cassette player as early as 1971, but it wouldn’t become common on options lists for almost another decade. By the end of the decade, the cassette was starting to sound all right, but the 8-track was the factory-­installed king of the dashboard. In the early and mid-Sixties, the audio quality wasn’t as good as the larger 8-track.

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CDs came in during the mid-Eighties and phased out after 2010 as Bluetooth became popular, whereas the cassette player was a bragging right in a new car for really only about 10 years from the late Seventies through the Eighties, if even that long. In the scope of automotive history, the CD player would go on to reign longer than the cassette deck as desired audio tech. Ottens personally listened to all his music on compact disc, another technology he played a major part in developing. He couldn’t remember the first thing he recorded on the prototype cassette. He lost the original model for the cassette player-a pocket-size piece of wood-when he used it to support a jack under his car. Ottens, who died in March at age 94, could never understand the affection people felt for his little plastic progeny. “The cassette was born from the clumsiness of a very clever man,” said one of his coworkers, Willy Leenders.

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A Dutch engineer working for Philips Electronics, Ottens came up with the idea of the portable self-contained cassette in the early Sixties after an evening spent wrestling with a reel-to-reel player. “People prefer a worse quality of sound because of nostalgia,” said Lou Ottens about the continued use of cassette tapes in the modern age.

gm aftermarket analog tapedeck

Even now, anytime I hear Fugazi’s “Waiting Room,” I expect it to be followed by Young MC’s “Bust a Move,” because that was the order they played on the tape a boy I met at art camp made for me. The original playlist, car play before it was capitalized: a custom mixtape.

gm aftermarket analog tapedeck

When it comes to automotive audio, my memories are wrapped around the yellow plastic spools of a Memorex DBS. Records get all the glory as the most romantic and physically present form of recorded music, but there’s no buying a Patsy Cline LP in a truck stop off I-10 and then listening to “She’s Got You” all the way from San Antonio to New Orleans. SIGN UP FOR THE TRACK CLUB BY R&T FOR MORE EXCLUSIVE STORIES This story originally appeared in Volume 6 of Road & Track.

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No, the boss of Black Flag means that you can’t physically hold a digital file, can’t trace its progress through the smoked-glass window of a stereo, can’t pick up a download off the floorboard of a ’73 Plymouth Duster, blow the schmutz off, and hear it click into place in your cheap aftermarket stereo. He doesn’t mean you can’t touch its quality-nobody but the most die-hard tape-phile would claim the cassette is a high point of fidelity. “You can’t touch it,” says Henry Rollins of digital music in the film Cassette: A Documentary Mixtape (2016).















Gm aftermarket analog tapedeck