| Wow, what a challenging recording 
environment!  What about the light bulbs in the room? I could have sworn I 
saw a variety of things that had metal on them, and I wasn't even on vallium, I 
swear. Let me know what you find out.   Kris 
  ----- Original Message -----  Sent: Wednesday, December 07, 2005 8:03 
  PM Subject: Re: The MRI and Looping: For 
  Ambient & Experimental Music? I was talking with one of the techs at the hospital where I 
  work about this discussion. He told me that there is nothing metal in the 
  room. In fact if you have a tattoo, they pack it in ice because something in 
  the ink reacts to the high magnetism and makes it really hot. I asked about 
  the Microphone they have in the room and he was telling me that all the 
  communication wiring is done with fiber optics. I was wondering about using a 
  couple of contact pickups, I have a few McIntyres kicking around here, on the 
  door or the window and seeing what it would pickup. If I get a chance, I can 
  ask about it if you like.
 
 paul
 
 Ontario, 
  Canada
 
 
 
 
 At 02:09 PM 12/7/2005, you wrote:
 
 
 That 
    would be outstanding. Perhaps putting the recording in the control room of 
    the MRI facility and having the wires run into the room, two stereo 
    microphones on either side of the machine would be ideal, but that may not 
    be feasible. Even a basis minidisc recorder with a small stereo microphone 
    attached would be good enough raw material for me!  
    :)
 Your comment about the 
    headphones explains why the headphones they put on me were attached to 
    plastic tubing that ran to the control room...just the like good ol' fashion 
    communication system in boats and submarines!  I think a mic would be 
    fine outside the machine. When I had my MRI, there were plenty of objects in 
    the room around the machine...I just couldn't have any metallic objects on 
    my body inside it. They were really concerned about that. I was shot in the 
    leg by a .357 magnum when I was a teenager, which left several pieces of 
    soft lead in my leg, which were removed surgically. That was enough for them 
    to open their manual and search for data on that caliber of gun, types of 
    bullets, copper vs. lead shells, etc.
 
 Kris
 
 |