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madamesilverspurs

(16,032 posts)
Sun Dec 26, 2021, 04:55 PM Dec 2021

Question re recording music from instrument

Last edited Tue Dec 28, 2021, 05:49 PM - Edit history (1)

My recently acquired Lowrey Jubilee organ has recording capability, with a slot to receive a floppy disk. So, once I locate some blank floppies, how would I go about transferring the recordings to thumb drives or other devices? My laptop doesn't take floppies, so I'm kinda stuck. Experience? Suggestions?

As always, thanks in advance!

(x-posted from musicians group)


UPDATE: Getting lots of helpful information, not surprising with this group, thank you! That said, it's still a bit daunting for this "non-techy" old lady. A friend suggested that I contact the music department at the university, ask if there's a student who might be willing to put eyes and maybe hands on the organ. So, I will be doing that. And, yes, I will let everyone here know how that turns out. Thanks again, so much!


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8 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Question re recording music from instrument (Original Post) madamesilverspurs Dec 2021 OP
Looked on Amazon and you can buy a usb external 3.5" floppy drive for about $20... wcmagumba Dec 2021 #1
-Thanks! madamesilverspurs Dec 2021 #3
Assuming you find some working floppies canetoad Dec 2021 #2
Ack! madamesilverspurs Dec 2021 #4
Get a headphone splitter and run from the phone jack of the organ to the mic port of your computer. Gidney N Cloyd Dec 2021 #7
...assuming the floppy is recording audio data in a compatible format Effete Snob Dec 2021 #5
I doubt you'd be able to get decent recording onto a floppy disc AZSkiffyGeek Dec 2021 #6
Getting music out of that organ ... CloudWatcher Dec 2021 #8

canetoad

(18,079 posts)
2. Assuming you find some working floppies
Sun Dec 26, 2021, 05:05 PM
Dec 2021

You will then need a computer with a drive that can read them. This will be the hardest part - not many A: drives these days.

It's all downhill after that; copy the music from the floppy to a computer and use one of several free audio programs to convert/save the organ music to a digital file that can be read nowadays.

Merry christmas

PS Apparently in various labs and archives around the world is huge amounts of earthquake and meteorological data - all recorded on obsolete media such as wire loop recorders, and there are no working devices to read it!

madamesilverspurs

(16,032 posts)
4. Ack!
Sun Dec 26, 2021, 05:10 PM
Dec 2021

And here I was hoping for a magic wand!

I found my old tape recorder, maybe I could put the headphones on it and go from there. Ain't nuthin' simple, yeah?

Merry Christmas to you, too!


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Gidney N Cloyd

(19,847 posts)
7. Get a headphone splitter and run from the phone jack of the organ to the mic port of your computer.
Sun Dec 26, 2021, 06:16 PM
Dec 2021

Plug your earphones into the other side of the splitter, of course, so you can hear yourself while playing live.
Now record what you're playing on something like Audacity.
Start out with low volume and make sure you don't overdrive the input.

 

Effete Snob

(8,387 posts)
5. ...assuming the floppy is recording audio data in a compatible format
Sun Dec 26, 2021, 05:51 PM
Dec 2021

If the recording is a control file for the organ to reproduce the music, however, then even if the drive were in a compatible data format, one would need an emulator for the organ in order to reproduce the music.

AZSkiffyGeek

(12,571 posts)
6. I doubt you'd be able to get decent recording onto a floppy disc
Sun Dec 26, 2021, 06:01 PM
Dec 2021

They're only going to be able to hold a minute or two of music in lower quality MP3.

CloudWatcher

(1,922 posts)
8. Getting music out of that organ ...
Mon Dec 27, 2021, 04:53 PM
Dec 2021

I don't know what model of Lowrey Jubilee you've got, but a quick google turned this up:

https://www.manualslib.com/manual/1895101/Lowrey-Jubilee-Lc-30.html?page=71#manual

Offhand it seems like they can record performances to the disk .. and even merge in
additional performances (recorded to accompaniment & upper tracks) for playback later.

So what's being recorded is definitely not a simple audio file (not raw or MP3). My guess is
that it's some sort of MIDI being saved. And the manual references being able to
play back its own formatted floppies or something called SMF (a MIDI standard file format).

I'm going to guess the floppies are not "standard" MSDOS format or anything semi-normal
you could read on a PC. You'd need some software specific to Lowrey Jubilee to read the files
off the floppy into your PC (even after you had the physical drive).

Oh my, someone sells a hardware replacement for the floppy drive (to replace it with a USB thumb drive):

https://lowreyorgan.uk/product/floppy-disk-emulator-fde-1000/

Hmmph. The warnings about using only thumb drives they sell you is a big red-flag to me. Sounds
much less than reputable.

But ... the back of the unit appears to have some standard MIDI connections. You might be happiest just
using some MIDI cables to connect to a computer (with a MIDI interface and software) to record and playback.

Or forget saving things digitally and use the aux-out connectors on the back to your tape recorder

Do have fun!

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