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1970: PERFECT ACOUSTICS with JAMES BURKE | Tomorrow's World | BBC Archive 

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Are you getting the best sound from your concert hall? Fear not, for here is Tomorrow's World presenter James Burke - one of the all-time great explainers of things - demonstrating how to get the best acoustics possible from any building, using nothing but the scientific principles of acoustic scaling, an anechoic chamber, a miniature Maida Vale studio, a guitar, some sweet fretwork... and a gun.
This clip is from Tomorrow's World, originally broadcast 30 October, 1970.
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27 авг 2024

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Комментарии : 58   
@ClassicGarth
@ClassicGarth 2 года назад
Never thought I would see James Burke playing flamenco guitar and waving a gun around in the park.
@GayorgVonTrapp
@GayorgVonTrapp 2 года назад
Ahhhh that voice! The voice of my childhood. What a bloke.
@RestWithin
@RestWithin 2 года назад
And what a guitarist he was.
@Dylan.299
@Dylan.299 2 года назад
Is it me or were presenters like JB and his ilk just so much more interesting and polished back then. Absolutely perfect delivery, such a talented guy.
@JanDahl
@JanDahl 3 месяца назад
They're looking for a different type of polish these days. More snake oil or used car salesmen types.
@stephenguppy7882
@stephenguppy7882 2 месяца назад
Well, James Burke was an intellectual with the common touch, who helped us understand science, technology and space in simple terms. In the 70s, The Burke Special was required viewing in our house.
@SpiritmanProductions
@SpiritmanProductions 2 года назад
Is there no end to this man's talents?
@nanduthalange7736
@nanduthalange7736 4 месяца назад
I had no idea James Burke was a brilliant guitarist in addition to all his other skills! Bravo!
@JDHetzer
@JDHetzer 2 года назад
Such an underrated presenter.
@ronaldtartaglia4459
@ronaldtartaglia4459 Год назад
He is an absolute legend
@Murfie-qe3pp
@Murfie-qe3pp 11 месяцев назад
Best science presenter the BBC ever had.
@spencerraney4979
@spencerraney4979 2 года назад
I could listen to him explain anything. Coming up with Connections was such a brilliant idea.
@ashakydd1
@ashakydd1 2 года назад
James Burke can play the guitar and play it well. I learned this today.
@EidolonMedia
@EidolonMedia 11 месяцев назад
Burke also did 'Connections', a series as powerful as Sagan's Cosmos. Many books. An unsung hero of purposeful mind.
@qwargy
@qwargy 2 года назад
I was waiting for the seagull to fall out of the air after he shot that revolver
@fenderstyle4644
@fenderstyle4644 2 года назад
His overall style is ahead of their time. Mind blowing
@thapainter11
@thapainter11 2 года назад
Every school should play these Burke anything.
@Folkerman66
@Folkerman66 2 года назад
He played that guitar very nicely. His brother Alan is a lovely guitar player and singer too!
@MrAsBBB
@MrAsBBB Год назад
Omg
@garymargarita5821
@garymargarita5821 11 месяцев назад
That man can do everything!
@jimcameron9848
@jimcameron9848 Год назад
This man. This treasure.
@OriginalCaliKitty
@OriginalCaliKitty Год назад
I've had a crush on James Burke for literally 60% of my life. (We in the U.S. didn't get to see him until PBS picked up Connections in '79.) Every once in a while I search RU-vid to see what I might find with him in it and now I've found this. I'll be sharing the link with a friend who's a been a sound engineer for many years.
@r4zi3lgintoro65
@r4zi3lgintoro65 2 года назад
they dont make television like this anymore
@JepMasta
@JepMasta Месяц назад
When I was a little kid, I grew up watching connections and connections to on TLC before it completely went to pot. I fell in love with James Burke and his tan leisure suit. He made everything so entertaining and so accessible while not talking down to the audience. But I never knew he was a guitar player.
@radeum1010
@radeum1010 18 дней назад
What a find.. Pure Gold. One of the best recommendations ever..
@cashawX10
@cashawX10 Год назад
It's like a Tom Scott video, but from 1970. I do miss the times that TV gave us nerdy, but precise narrative. Tomorrow's World was my favorite programme, even as a young kid. I also love how this video was less about acoustics and more about James proving he is an expert player of the Spanish guitar.. 🤣🤣
@foot2
@foot2 2 года назад
No one is like Burke.
@SM-dt1pr
@SM-dt1pr 2 года назад
Young people don't realise that ALL BBC presenters in the 1960s and 1970s were expected to be competent musicians. Michael Rodd was also a guitarist, and Patrick Moore played the xylophone. Michael Barratt was given an exemption by passing membership of the Magic Circle.
@UFBMusic
@UFBMusic Год назад
I assumed that you were bullshitting, but damned if I didn't just watch a video of Patrick Moore playing the xylophone!
@johnathandaviddunster38
@johnathandaviddunster38 Год назад
Ken Dodd played the fiddle.....
@johnathandaviddunster38
@johnathandaviddunster38 Год назад
Benny hill played the casternets....
@jagmarc
@jagmarc 8 месяцев назад
Frank Spencer played the fool. Sorry!
@afitzsimons
@afitzsimons Год назад
Perfect delivery.
@imark7777777
@imark7777777 Год назад
Well I discovered this guy in an obscure section of the Internet, the dry port blank timeless explanations are maddeningly exciting. To discover this little clip delving deep in audio wow. I still think they faked the guitar but I don't think they would!
@rizmid
@rizmid 2 года назад
An excellent share! A fan and an admirer from Pakistan.
@SpiritmanProductions
@SpiritmanProductions 2 года назад
Love the video, love Burke, but that 1:8-scale model would only be accurate if the air inside were 8 times as dense, surely?
@GlutenEruption
@GlutenEruption 2 года назад
Although it seems like it should be intuitively, that not actually the case. Speed of sound = frequency/wavelength. The density of the air has a negligible effect on the speed of sound, which is only affected by temp and humidity. As long as temp and humidity are the same in both, then the only parameter that needs to change to scale the acoustics properly is frequency. The full scale (Ffs) frequency and scale model frequency (Fsm) are directly proportional to the scale ratio (in this case, full scale/model scale = 8/1 = 8) by the formula Fs = 8 * Ffs, ie the original frequency*8.
@luigibusacchi5401
@luigibusacchi5401 2 года назад
The reversed fader in the control room mixer is amazing!
@imark7777777
@imark7777777 Год назад
I was wondering if they were actually reversed or if they cut the audio to fit. I wouldn't be surprised if they were reversed that was an early consul and I could see a design like that.
@ambroseshepherd6861
@ambroseshepherd6861 8 месяцев назад
The BBC were notorious for having their faders (both audio and video) upside down to everyone else's. Have no idea why. I did wonder if the snatches of music were dubbed on, though.
@jozefserf2024
@jozefserf2024 8 месяцев назад
​@@ambroseshepherd6861Apparently the idea was that if the presenter was about to experience a heart attack or some similar disaster, they could collapse forwards and close the fader before passing out.
@ambroseshepherd6861
@ambroseshepherd6861 7 месяцев назад
Never knew that, thanks!
@jonlongshaw9010
@jonlongshaw9010 2 года назад
Quality
@J-Loe
@J-Loe 2 года назад
Dream Video
@julianaylor4351
@julianaylor4351 2 года назад
It took years to sort out the acoustic mess that used to be The Royal Albert Hall. Next time you watch a Proms concert on television, look at the ceiling, if it's in view. The structures on it, fixed a nightmare echo, which can be heard on earlier recordings done there, such as Cream's Farewell Concert prior to their later reunion; the difference is obvious.
@colindayo
@colindayo 2 года назад
And it’s still bloody awful despite what they’ve spent on it (for rock music, anyway)
@myriaddsystems
@myriaddsystems Год назад
I didn't know the range James's talent
@walterevans2118
@walterevans2118 Год назад
WONDERFUL
@Bilzo599
@Bilzo599 Год назад
Amazing!!
@johnathandaviddunster38
@johnathandaviddunster38 Год назад
Clever burke.....
@92trdman
@92trdman Год назад
The discover of project LS3/5
@abhishekmsful
@abhishekmsful 2 года назад
This guy is from the future!!!!
@bugaluka
@bugaluka 2 года назад
Olé!
@fredhoupt4078
@fredhoupt4078 2 года назад
yeah for rare James Burke.
@MaxPower-11
@MaxPower-11 Месяц назад
James Burke plays flamenco guitar? And well! Who knew?! With respect to acoustic design… I suppose nowadays all of this would be simulated on a computer using sophisticated sound modeling software.
@christophercaldwell6888
@christophercaldwell6888 Месяц назад
Ah, how the world has changed. Synthesized dead noise for testing. Computerized acoustic modeling, up to and including changing the sound environment by adding people, objects, etc. Regression testing to reduce the time of experiments from hours to seconds. AI listeners to rapidly determine what environment is likely to appealing to the largest selection of human listeners. AI noise (ok, music) generators. How long will it be 'til we have AI music generators playing to AI listeners without humans involved? And none will be the voice of Mr. Burke.
@afterthesmash
@afterthesmash Год назад
Hmm, if our modern earbuds get any deeper, they'll be implanted in our brainstems, and all that's left of the acoustic environment will be glial cells gossiping about who has been naught and nice.
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