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- Record Album, "Crosby, Stills & Nash," 1969 -

- 1969
- Collections - Artifact
Record Album, "Crosby, Stills & Nash," 1969
- Tape Recording Featuring Live Performance of Jim Croce, 1976-1977 - The transformative effects of magnetic tape upon sound, broadcast, and computing history cannot be overstated. In 1930, German companies AEG and BASF revised wire recording technology by using a new material: plastic tape coated with magnetic iron pigment. Its proposed applications were varied, idealistic and practical: recording music and radio, factory automation, data storage, media lending libraries, and many others.

- August 01, 1970
- Collections - Artifact
Tape Recording Featuring Live Performance of Jim Croce, 1976-1977
The transformative effects of magnetic tape upon sound, broadcast, and computing history cannot be overstated. In 1930, German companies AEG and BASF revised wire recording technology by using a new material: plastic tape coated with magnetic iron pigment. Its proposed applications were varied, idealistic and practical: recording music and radio, factory automation, data storage, media lending libraries, and many others.
- Record Album Cover, "Sloop John B" and "You're So Good to Me," 1966 - The Beach Boys issued their version of "Sloop John B" as a single in March 1966, and it became a worldwide hit. The Bahamian folk song came to the band's attention through a 1958 recording by the American group the Kingston Trio. "Sloop John B" was included on the Beach Boys' influential <em>Pet Sounds</em> album, released in May 1966.

- 1966
- Collections - Artifact
Record Album Cover, "Sloop John B" and "You're So Good to Me," 1966
The Beach Boys issued their version of "Sloop John B" as a single in March 1966, and it became a worldwide hit. The Bahamian folk song came to the band's attention through a 1958 recording by the American group the Kingston Trio. "Sloop John B" was included on the Beach Boys' influential Pet Sounds album, released in May 1966.