Place it back on one of the reels (see red pattern). Screw the cassette back together. Place it into a tape deck and enjoy. You can also record over ...
I saw this in a Punk-fan-zine, Just passing on the idea.
Instead of using multiple cassette players, I use loop cassettes (sometimes my own, sometimes answering machine tape) in four-track machines. I wrote a whole article about this technique, it's really interesting, and pretty damn cheap, these days.
I also have an ongoing project I call Repetitive Miniatures which is nothing but recordings of cassette loops I've built up with the four-track.
It's definitely a bitch to make your own tapes, but you can sometimes still find splicing blocks at Radio Shack which help a lot.
Hey, I have the zine that this came from! It was originally done in "How to Zine" published out of Richmond, then republished in Making Stuff and Doing Things (the zine collection book with Christy Roads' art on the front). If you got it from one of these and haven't read the other, check it out! They're both excellent!
Whoa thanks for sharing this looping technique, this is right up my alley. I don't believe documentation is totally necessary to get this idea across.+
I'd say a multi loop pedal (with the possibility to do 4 echo with adjustable delay controlled by the pedal release). This would involve a good micro controller programming though... ;)
For more repeats all you have to do is feed the signal back from the read head to the record head with a pot which allows you to adjust the number of repeats.
Perhaps something could be worked out with a small roller on a lever arm, spring loaded to provide tensioning? That way, no matter the length of the tape (limited by the length of the spring, and the laws of geometry) the tape wouldn't go slack.
Don't forget to check out this instructables, too. I think we've worked out (in theory) most of the problems, I just haven't actually pulled it off (yet). You could amybe make some kind of multi looper with analog cassette tapes playing drones/crazy drum loops/walls of nosie, and the digital looper playing a chord progression/loop/more process beat.
Pretty sure the tape goes at 1 7/8 inches per second. You could make different sized loops by sending it over the other hub. Getting the tension right will keep the tape machine happier.
HAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!! street vendors, including the Ice cream man, are banned from my town. I live just out side the lines of chicago. So I try to wave them down every time they pass through here. I do what I can to piss off the cops. :)
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I also have an ongoing project I call Repetitive Miniatures which is nothing but recordings of cassette loops I've built up with the four-track.
It's definitely a bitch to make your own tapes, but you can sometimes still find splicing blocks at Radio Shack which help a lot.
http://mysterycircuits.com/melloman/melloman.html
using this technique.
http://www.instructables.com/id/EFKSQRX8Z0EP287017?ALLSTEPS