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The Queen Mother of ALL Ghetto Blasters, the Lasonic TRC-931 was a wall - literally. WITH all 10
"D" size batteries it required, it weighed a good 30 pounds. It had a
dual cassette deck and not just any dual cassette deck. This thing was
so badass, the Play deck was side-loading (like in a car stereo), just to make room for the
massive 12" inch woofers. The radio had not one, but TWO telescopic
antennas, AM/FM and two Shortwave bands. A full 5 band graphic
equalizer, auxiliary inputs (earliest models included a PHONO input for
your turntable!) stereo enhancement and pumped out a generous 50 watts
per channel. And where where you most likely to buy one? Try WOOLWORTH! |
No photo does justice to this one - this one is, to this day the BIGGEST
ghetto blaster ever made. It sported an AM/FM/Shortwave radio, which
was a strange feature on many portable stereos in the '80s.
No
American teenager actively listened to shortwave radio back then - in
spite of stations like the English transmissions of Radio Moscow (which
broadcasted Western rock music that would get any Soviet teenager sent
straight to the gulags if they were ever caught listening to it. With a
healthy dose of anti-American propaganda in spite of the fact many of
the Western rock acts they did play were AMERICAN.)
Secondly,
the low-fi, wildly fluctuating unevenness and irregularity of the
shortwave radio signal made music listening on it an endurance test. My
guess was the manufacturers were thinking of some phantom jet-set people
who wanted to take a radio with them that could allow them to pick up
The Voice Of America or the BBC World Service should they wind up in
say, Nairobi. But the size of this ghetto blaster (the actual size of a
suitcase), to say nothing of the weight (30 lbs. - with the 10 - yes, I
said
10 - "D" cell batteries required to feed this thing off of
the AC power grid) and weight (did I mention the $200 - about $400 in 2012 dollars) price tag?)
guaranteed this radio was STAYING in America.
It had a dual
cassette (one deck was a player that you inserted a cassette into it
like a car stereo) while the other was a typical ghetto blaster
player/recorder for dubbing your Iron Maiden tapes (for your friends in
Nairobi) both with auto-reverse, a 5 band graphic equalizer, a Loudness
button (for extra punchy bass) through the 12" speakers and countless
other buttons as well as a light show in itself just to make this work.
Lasonic
went ass over tea kettle (whatever that means) on this product. But even though
Lasonic (who?) weren't a very well known electronics name like Sony,
Panasonic or Aiwa, this radio became so influential on the TRUE ghetto
blaster folks (early rap stars), that Lasonic reissued the TRC-931 in
2007, with iPod connections replacing the often faulty dual cassette
system. I really think, why not just BUILD an MP3 player/recorder into
it, using thumb/flash drives (the cassettes of today?)
Portable
stereos in the early '80s were HUGE things only for the most headstrong
music fan when a simple Walkman won't do.
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I once knew a
kid named Glenn who owned one of these General Electric babies. When he
blasted his Judas Priest tapes out of this thing, every moose in Canada
could hear it. The FM and AM reception was STUNNING. I ALWAYS wanted
one.... |
But by the mid '80s, they
started getting smaller...and smaller.
I'm not sure if it was
the lawyers were getting on them for the hernia problems these huge
radio/tape decks were potentially causing for kids at school (I mean
with 30 lbs. of boombox and cassette tapes on one arm and another 30
lbs. of Trapper Keeper and books on the other.). But the rockin' out sure
took a hit.
Then it really got colourful:
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The Sharp QT-50 |
Then these things started showing up. The Sharp QT-50 from 1985. A sort of
retro-trip in pastel colours (pink, lavender, peach, seafoam green,
banana yellow, powder puff blue and even beige) that even the girliest of girls and
gayest of guys get nervous at today just looking at this thing. But 1985
was also the year of guys wearing pink polo shirts and Miami Vice.
There were 8-track capable sets
This was Montgomery Ward's 1983 offering. Montgomery Ward, Radio Shack
and the RCA Music Service were the final outposts for the hardened
8-track tape lover in the '80s as Montgomery Ward still made players by
the end of 1984, Radio Shack still sold blank 8-tracks, tape head
cleaners and cases and the RCA Music Service still made and offered a slowly decreasing, selection of new 8-track tapes well into 1988.
...and those with TVs
Some even had turntables (for warping and scratching your records
while playing volleyball on the beach.)
Sadly...by 1990, the portable stereo had become, seen-one, you seen 'em,
all black things in weird shapes with CD players. They brought the
colours back too more recently, but I still wish they made them like
those BIG powerhouses from back in the day....