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Apologies Dennis Moser wrote: > Ladies and gents, > > A quick Worldcat search for said title > (http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/700395&referer=brief_results > <http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/700395&referer=brief_results>) turns up a > copy here at work ... I shall see if I can snag it at lunch here shortly > for a further citation ... > > The Net, when inthe hands of a seasoned and trained librarian/archivist, > is Your Friend ... > > Dennis > > On 11/26/07, *andy butler* < akbutler@tiscali.co.uk > <mailto:akbutler@tiscali.co.uk>> wrote: > > Stockhausen, Conversations with the Composer > Jonathan Cott > Picador 1974 > (also pub by Robson Books Ltd 1974) > page 92 > ISBN 0 330 24165 6 the above book I have I think Cott has 2 mentions of the Springer, but essentially it is a dictation machine. Has a drum with a number of heads on it which can revolve as the tape passes by. So it granulises the sound in typical harmoniser fashion. It's a very good book imho. the below book is a different one, it may exist somewhere if it doesn't exist then the photoelectric loop player is possibly an invention of mine :-) > > sadly the book which described his photoelectric (canned) loop device > must have been consumed when Norwich Library burned down in 1994 > (and our late Stockhausen scolar, Dr. Zvonar was unable to find > any mention of this device in any book) > > andy butler > andy > > Goddard, Duncan wrote: > >>> the tape based pitch shifter used by Stockhausen was called a > Springer > > Machine<< > > > > andy, how did you come by this factoid? I thought the only >tape-based > > pitch shifter was the eltro..... > > gotham studios had one, & the BBC radiophonic workshop, & someone > here > > (my apologies) sent me some literature on it, which I may be able >to > > dredge up. > > > > duncan. > > > > > >