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A Brief History of
Diamond Cut Productions, Inc.

In the spring of 1986, an R&D engineer/scientist
by the name of Craig Maier read an article in The Star Ledger,
a local newspaper, entitled "Budget Cuts Cast Shadow
on Edison National Historic Site." The article, written
by science editor Kitta McPherson, described the deteriorating
condition of the Edison National Historic Site and its archives
located in West Orange, New Jersey. Among the many artifacts
which were not receiving the proper curatorial attention due
to poor funding was a collection of test-press recordings
which were made by the Edison company between the years of
1927 through 1929, which was their last few years in the record
business. Craig told a friend and fellow engineer named Rick
Carlson about the article in hopes that it might stir up in
him some interest in the Edison site as well. Craig and Rick,
after some considerable discussion, decided to offer to volunteer
some of their spare time and technical expertise in the area
of audio hardware and software engineering in order that the
Edison Lateral collection of test pressing recordings could
be transferred to digital tape so that the "sound artifacts"
would be eternally preserved and archived in the digital domain
at the site.
Contact was made with then Supervisor Museum
Curator, Dr. Edward Pershey, Ph.D. During their first meeting
at the site, Dr. Pershey showed the two engineers thousands
of one-of-a-kind test pressing recordings which were piled
in stacks on a long row of tables on the second floor of the
Edison main laboratory building. This initial introduction
to the collection was an earnest attempt to sober up these
two individuals as to the magnitude of the undertaking for
which they were volunteering. The total number of songs which
were recorded numbered over 1200 in anywhere from two to five
takes each. This only further increased their interest in
the project since the possibility of finding some truly important
music that had previously been unheard since the late 1920's
would be quite high in such a large collection of test pressings.
After several additional meetings with Dr. Pershey, an informal
agreement was made such that the two engineers could proceed
to seek out funding from private sources to set up an audio
restoration laboratory in one of their own homes for the project.
They contacted around 30 companies in the New Jersey area
seeking funds to help build their laboratories. After about
seven months of effort, they succeeded in raising enough money
to fund their project. In addition to fund raising, they also
designed and constructed several pieces of custom equipment
which was needed for the project (equipment which was not
readily available on the market at the time).
The next step was to become educated in the
proper technique of archival audio transferring. To that end,
they hired Mr. Tom Owens of the Rogers and Hammerstein musical
library in New York City as an engineering consultant. Tom
spent time with the two engineers at the New York City Public
Library sound lab (Rogers and Hammerstein) teaching them some
of the "tricks of the trade." Tom also visited the
first sound lab which the two engineers set up for the restoration
project located at Craig's home in Verona, NJ. He provided
constructive criticism regarding the sound lab which the two
engineers had set up, allowing them to improve upon their
initial system. One significant problem which Tom highlighted
for the two engineers was that of establishing the correct
turnover frequency for the transfer of these lateral test
pressings. Documentation could not be found at the Edison
site regarding the specifics of this important parameter.
So Rick and Craig devised some experiments which were conducted
on a "high-end" vacuum tube based Edison phonograph
designed around the same time period as the test pressings
in order to deduce the correct turnover frequency. After their
experiments, modifications were made to their magnetic phonograph
pre-amplifier to provide the most likely proper turnover frequency
for the transfers.
A seven year pro-bono contract was drawn up
between the Edison National Historic Site / U.S. Department
of the Interior, and Rick Carlson and Craig Maier for the
purposes of executing the project outlined above.
Finally, the two engineers were ready to begin the project.
Nearly one full year had lapsed before the first record was
transferred to digital tape at Craig's home in Verona, N.J.
Shortly thereafter, the sound lab was rebuilt in the Maier's
new home in Rockaway Township, NJ. That is the location in
which the lions share of the transfer project took place over
the next seven years.
After transferring around 900 of the songs
(times 2 - 5 takes per song, about 2,200 transfers in total)
Craig and Rick decided that the music was not doing much good
sitting in the underground vault of a museum. Since they were
the only two people alive who had heard almost the entire
collection, they decided that it would be a good idea to try
to release some of this previously unreleased material (only
around 200 of the songs had ever been released in the Edison
lateral format). So they approached the Edison site in order
to try to accomplish this. After about one year of frustration
in dealing with the bureaucracy, they decided it would be
a lot easier to form their own company and release these songs
under their own record label. Thus was formed Diamond Cut
Productions in 1992 with Craig and Rick providing their own
seed capital for the venture. Their first release entitled
"Unreleased Edison Laterals 1 - - - an anthology of Edison
Needle type records" was such a success in the market
that they were able to start another project in 1994 entitled
"The California Ramblers, Edison Laterals 2." For
this project, they decided to improve on the audio restoration
process which they had used on their previous release. Instead
of analog signal processing, they migrated to digital signal
processing utilizing their own algorithms to remove crackle,
ticks, pops and hiss from the original material. They named
their process (which ran on an inexpensive pc) "Diamond
Cut Audio restoration tools" or DC-Art for short. Their
technique proved successful to the extent that the Smithsonian
Institution Press employed Diamond Cut Productions to perform
audio restoration for some of their American Songwriter Series
of CD releases using this process. Diamond Cut's third CD
release entitled "Hot Dance of the Roaring 20's, Edison
Laterals 3" was processed utilizing exclusively their
own audio restoration program; all analog processing equipment
had been abandoned by this point in time. In the meantime
and in parallel with the efforts to bring "Hot Dance
. . . " to the market, Craig worked with County records
to produce and release an Edison olde tyme group on CD called
"Ernest Stoneman and his Dixie Mountaineers" using
their audio restoration process. In the spring of 1996, their
program was first formally introduced into the commercial
marketplace at a meeting of "Record Research" which
was held at the Maier residence in Rockaway Township, NJ.
Since then it has been sold throughout the world for not only
musical audio restoration applications, but for others such
as 911 call restoration, clarification of police surveillance
recordings, cleanup of radio broadcasts for release on CD,
restoration of historic spoken word recordings, cockpit voice
recording restoration, plus many others.
DC-Art has now become one of the predominant
players in the international audio restoration software market.
In the software domain, they are also planning the introduction
of a product specifically designed for the enhancement of
compressed MP3 files which will be released early in 2001.
Also, new features and improved performance are planned to
be added into their legacy audio restoration software products.
In the future, Diamond Cut Productions expects
to continue releasing more CDs in their Edison Lateral Cut
series. However, they have also branched out into other musical
venues from the 1920's and 1930's.
For more info on the Edison Lateral Series click here.
Recently, they released a CD entitled "Vintage
Vallee - Rudy Vallee and his Connecticut Yankees" which
includes 23 of the earliest recordings made by this group
in the late 1920's. Shortly, a new CD will be released entitled
"Early Eddy Duchin - - - 1932 to 1937."
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