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Charles Rodrigues audiophile cartoons


DTLongo

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Many moons ago in the 1960's, 1970's and 1980's a cartoonist named Charles Rodrigues published his audiophile cartoons in the then-magazines HiFi & Music Review which became Stereo Review. Many were hilarious. Looking back on them, they constitute a humorous, tongue-in-cheek catalog of the states of the art at the time, all the fads and foibles, from superfcalifragilistic phono cartridges to mega-turntables to supertube amps to boomboxes to tape decks to World's Best Loudspeakers to... In 1988 many of the cartoons were compiled into a book, "Total Harmonic Distortion," that is now extremely rare and unobtainable. Well, I just obtained one for a price rivaling, relatively for books, what you'd pay for a topline speaker like P-39F's. It took a search outfit called alibris.com over a year to find a copy for me, but they did and it is in mint-new condition and NOT for sale.

Alas, the collection does not include my all-time favorite of his that my (sick?) self still chuckles over in recollecting. Two jailers are testing an electric chair. The caption went something like, "Sorry, Mac, it's not right yet, she's still clipping!" But here is another one of the cartoons. Let me know if there is interest and I will run additional ones from time to time.

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My favorite two were the one about Seniors citizens not needing useless frills, on sale, speakers without tweeters.

But the best was the guy kneeling in front of his girlfriend and proposing with an open jewelry box revealing a phono cartridge instead of a ring.

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"My favorite two were the one about Senior citizens not needing useless frills, on sale, speakers without tweeters. But the best was the guy kneeling in front of his girlfriend and proposing with an open jewelry box revealing a phono cartridge instead of a ring."

ClaudeJ1, I'm not sure they're the exact ones you referred but I found in the book two 'toons that pertain. Here's the first...

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Thanks for those. I do remember the one about the stereo for old guys with hearing loss. Funny stuff.

Does anyone remember the fake product review they'd do once a year? Maybe it was Audio magazine. Professor Lirpa. I recall they did one on a phono cartridge and made up a spec called the ERC or Elastic Rebound Characteristic - this was the height the cartridge would bounce to when dropped from a one meter height onto a marble slab.

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Featured
links of the Month - April 2006


A spiritual
visit from I. Lirpa



Those of you who are old enough to have met
or read about the interminable Mr. Lirpa will agree with me that ANY visit
from the esteemed gentleman is an honor, all jokes notwithstanding. For
years his brilliant and weighty (literally...) inventions graced the pages
of Audio Magazine, and it is with a tip of the historical hat that I ever
so humbly present some offerings which I can only guess were inspired by
I. Lirpa's genius. Oddly enough, a google search will only reveal scant
information about this secretive genius, yet the mere mention of his name
in certain technical circles is enough to cause joyful havoc among the constituents.


Actually most of the thanks for this month's
content go to Wes Phillips, one of the resident geniuses at Stereophile,
whos columns/newsletters/blogs (as mentioned below, for January 2006) I
would not miss (nor should you) and some of whose links I am honored to
pass along.


While nearly everyone makes fun of Professor
I. Lirpa, who among us cannot appreciate the scientific contribution of
such devices as the cement turbo steam turntable (and rowboat), the shower
microphone, the 5kg (antivibration) tonearm, the inflatable audio reviewer,
and the ZYX phono system? I have it on pretty good authority that the famous
Rane PsuedoAcoustic Infector
( PDF file, HERE
pdftiny_15x16.gif
120k ) was inspired by the good professor's work.


There is a real listing of all the Audio Magazine
articles (PDF) HERE.
If there is enough interest, we will revive the T-shirts once handed out
an an AES convention which said on the front, "Pin 1 Hot" and
on the back, "Back to Mono".


Here then are some audio-connected and I. Lirpa
inspired musings for the Month of April, starting with the web page where
everyone gets 'those' pictures from... right here - the Acoustic
Radar page
.


See the King of Audio HERE.


Professor Lirpa would LOVE this hamster
powered midi music machine
. What, you think that's easy? OK, YOU
build something that cool and submit it for next year!


And speaking of building things, here's a gramophone
... Audio clothing, (otherwise known as Sonic
Fabric
), and at least one of the world's
largest subwoofers
... ahhh, but here's the OTHER
world's largest...


Professor Lirpa would appreciate racecars built
out of cassette machines, here
... and as long as we're out on the open road how
about a little vinyl
?


sonytoypat1.gif


One of the reasons you don't hear much about
the professor any more is that someone told me he was working for Sony.
Hmmm, you don't believe me? Take a look at this
page
from free patents online, with a PDF of the abstract HERE...
(the patent site places a
session cookie on your machine and it seems you have to access the PDF from
INSIDE the first
page
)


In your audio travels you will surely want
to visit here , one of
the most enchanting and flawlessly done flash / audio sites around.


newsurround400x255.jpg


And if you want to beat the drums right now,
try this. A little
more animé in approach, but still self generated, is this
site
. As long as we're on track of pointless obfuscation, lookee here.
(small hint: once you get inside, mouseover and click) (amazing!)


We have more "Things In A Class By Themselves"
here on our own Links Page 5, about
halfway down the page on the left, and in case you missed last year's April
fun, it's near the bottom of this page, HERE


surround_sound_2.jpg

Surround Sound setup inspired by the great professor


Maybe not quite in an audio vein, but one of
Professor I. Lirpa's students (and a genius in his own right) is Professor
Irwin Corey, whose homepage is here.
I'm sure you will see the connection.


There's more to come if I can find it, or if
you can submit it, email me here: webmaster@BostonAudioSociety.org Let's
give the good professor his own honorable page in history!


Enjoy!

— Barry

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Those are all precious. Thanks for sharing!

For what its worth I have a Charles Bragg litho that was used for the Akai advertisements. There were 3 I believe. I have the Frankenstein one with the tape deck bolted to his head. Sure wish I could find the other two.

Thanks again [;)]

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