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It
it were not for Dolby Stereo, the 70mm format would probably have been
completely extinct in the early 70s. Dolby´s noise reduction system, known
as Type A, was applied to studio recordings of film sound in the early 70s,
and subsequently also applied for stereo presentation in cinemas a few years
later. That idea was an unprecedented, giant step into better everyday sound
presentation in cinema.
Dolby
Stereo´s breakthrough came with the release of "Star Wars"
in 1977. Everyone sat up and took notice.
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Further in 70mm reading:
Part 2
Processors
Milestones
Technologies
Format codes
In 70mm
Dolby
Internet link:
Dolby Laboratories
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Even
though the 35mm optical sound quality was improved, the absolute
creme-de-la-creme of movie sound was only obtainable from magnetic sound
available only from 70mm prints. Therefore, the 70mm format was reintroduced
to cinemagoers, still with 6-track stereo, but now Dolby encoded. The
original 6 discrete uncompressed channels were reconfigured into a left,
center and right screen channel plus a surround channel (renamed from
effects channel). Except for a few rare 70mm show-prints (that used the
original 5 discrete channels behind the screen with directional dialogue)
used in major first run cinemas in Los Angeles, New York and London, the
sound was now "folded in" in such a way that most dialogue came
from the center channel. The tag line "In 70mm and 6-Track Dolby
Stereo" was a clever marketing gimmick that for 20 years and nearly 250
films secured the best possible sound reproduction in the cinema.
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A
Brief History of Dolby Laboratories
Edited from www.dolby.com
In
1965, American engineer and physicist Ray Dolby established Dolby
Laboratories in London. His aim was to develop practical noise reduction
systems for improving sound quality in a variety of professional and
consumer environments. The resulting innovations have made Dolby a watchword
for quality audio throughout the world.
Today,
Dolby Laboratories continues to pursue genuine, long-term improvements in
sound quality. The company's research in analogue and digital audio is
applied both to the professional products which Dolby manufactures and
sells, as well as technology which is licensed to other manufacturers for
their own professional and consumer products. Innovations from Dolby
Laboratories are used in every country where sound recordings are made, and
can be heard in everything from portable cassette players to high-end home
theatre systems, radio stations to satellite music systems, quality movie
theatres to professional recording studios.
Most
recently, the company's latest digital audio technology -- referred to as
Dolby Digital (using AC-3) -- has brought new excitement to the soundtracks
of a thousand plus films, and to home listeners on current generation laser
discs. Dolby Digital also is bringing excitement to home listeners via the
audio tracks on DVD, and would be the standard audio on the new high
definition television (HDTV) system proposed for implementation in the
United States if it ever catches on with the public.
Dolby's
Business Philosophy
Design
Excellence, Responsive Service, Long-Term Results.
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Worldwide
Facilities
Dolby
Presentation Cinema in San Francisco
Dolby
Laboratories' corporate headquarters, housing research and development,
marketing, licensing and administrative staff, is located in San Francisco's
historic Potrero Hill district, in a renovated brick warehouse dating from
the early 1900s.
The facility
includes a state-of-the-art film screening
room and listening and testing facilities for the wide range of consumer
products incorporating Dolby technology. North American manufacturing
operations, using the latest in surface mount and other current
manufacturing processes, are housed a short distance away in Brisbane,
California. This site serves customers throughout the Americas, Japan and
Korea.
Dolby
Laboratories' European base, in the Wiltshire, England countryside, is home
to marketing, licensing, administrative and manufacturing staff serving
customers in Europe and Asia. This facility, constructed to Dolby's
specifications, includes a screening room and full-scale manufacturing
operations which also use the latest in surface mount and other current
manufacturing processes.
Additionally,
Dolby Laboratories maintains two film division offices, located in New York
and Los Angeles, to provide on-site, responsive service to filmmakers and
recording professionals working on Dolby sound mixes. Both offices host
frequent technical seminars and other events of interest to the
behind-the-scenes film and audio community.
For
professional products, Dolby Laboratories' worldwide network of dealers and
distributors is available to assist customers with their product needs for
studio, broadcast, and cinema sound equipment. For consumer products,
retailers throughout the world are familiar with Dolby technologies for
cassette noise reduction and home theatre sound.
Dolby
Laboratories employs approximately 500 people worldwide.
Dolby
Investigates Film Sound
In
the late 1960s, even as home stereo B-type noise reduction was coming to
market, Dolby began to look further a field for applications of its noise
reduction technology. One area that looked promising was film sound, in
particular, the photographic or "optical" soundtrack, introduced
in the late 1920s. Thanks in great part to Dolby's efforts, that analog
optical track is still by far and away the most popular way of providing
sound with film.
The
optical soundtrack has many advantages, including economy, reliability, and
relatively long print life. Equally as important, 35 mm film with optical
sound is a truly universal medium: a film made in the U.S., for example, can
play in theaters the world over. This universality, however, had its
downside.
To
forestall compatibility problems after a decade of theaters racing to
install differing sound equipment and filmmakers rushing "talkies"
into production, in the late 1930s the film industry adopted a standardized
theater playback response that today is called the "Academy"
characteristic. While this resulted in a relatively uniform system of
recording and playback that made it possible for just about any film to
sound acceptable in any theater in the world, it lacked the flexibility to
incorporate improvements beyond the limitations that existed in the 1930s.
Indeed, well into the 1970s conventional optical sound reproduction in film
theatres had a frequency response little wider than a telephone's.
Upon
investigation, Dolby found that the many of the limitations in optical sound
stemmed directly from its significantly high background noise. Essentially
to filter this noise, the high-frequency response of theater playback
systems was deliberately curtailed (the "Academy" characteristic).
To make matters worse, in order to increase dialogue intelligibility over
such systems, sound mixers were recording soundtracks with so much
high-frequency pre-emphasis that high distortion resulted.
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