Just to chip one other small thing on this regarding the part of your question 
referring to:

'I'm thinking of things beyond concentric
> grooves, groove reversal (starting a record from the inside to play
> outward), and looped grooves."

[I think you know all the following Denise. It's just for the record and for 
those who don't know! ;-)

There are several well-known Detroit electronic music records which 
unconventionally play from 'inside-to-out'.

Many of them were cut by renknowed cutting engineer, the late, great Ron Murphy 
at NSC.

http://fwd4.me/mEe

Here's one which plays like that:

Drexciya - Deep Sea Dweller

http://fwd4.me/mEg


In fact Mr. Murphy was behind a number of unconventionally cut records of the 
same ilk, including this one, which was one of NSC's more well-known 
'double-groove' cuts:

Hidden In Plainsight EP

http://fwd4.me/mEa


Ken

-----Original Message-----
From: Michael Elliot-Knight [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: 05 November 2010 16:06
To: Denise Dalphond
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: (313) Research question about vinyl manipulation

I've never heard of it being done and I can't imagine it would work very well - 
any adhesive along the seam would stand a good chance of seeping into the 
grooves thus producing an obstacle for the needle

Also, having seen enough microscopic images of vinyl record grooves I can tell 
you that the grooves of two different records will not line up well enough for 
the needle to track.
Once the needle hits the seam it's going to bounce out of that groove.  At best 
you could, if very lucky, find two records that might work but you'd have to 
use a microscope to find a matching point between the two at any point along 
their grooves.  What more, if you were lucky enough to get the needle to track 
at one point I would bet money that upon reaching the 180 degree rotation the 
groove won't match and the needle will bounce.

MEK

Denise Dalphond <[email protected]> wrote on 11/03/2010 05:08:48 PM:

> From: Denise Dalphond <[email protected]>
> To: [email protected]
> Date: 11/03/2010 05:09 PM
> Subject: (313) Research question about vinyl manipulation
>
> Hi all,
>
> Has anyone ever done or heard of anyone doing the following IN DETROIT:
>
> Physically manipulating a piece of vinyl by cutting it down the middle
> exactly and then gluing it to another half of vinyl so that the
> grooves match up and it can actually play? Or any other kind of
> dramatic vinyl manipulation? I'm thinking of things beyond concentric
> grooves, groove reversal (starting a record from the inside to play
> outward), and looped grooves.
>
> Feel free to message me directly if you'd rather. Thanks!
>
> --
> Denise Dalphond
> Ph.D. Candidate
> Department of Folklore & Ethnomusicology Indiana University
> http://denisedjsdetroit.blogspot.com/


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