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  #1  
Old 11-30-2010, 04:30 PM
Hankphenom Hankphenom is offline
Hank Thomas
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jtschantz View Post
I am curious about a comment made in this thread about someone owning the original tapes. It has been my understanding that the baseball HOF owns the tapes. I really don't care who owns them, I just want to hear more! I also have read the book, but its the voices on the audio book that I really enjoy. I think I have it in every form (LP, casset tape, cd, and now on an ipod). If anyone has any information on the possible release of more of the tapes, let us know more detail if possible.
The Hall of Fame is starting a 3-year project to digitize their entire collection, which includes Ritter's original reel-to-reel audio tapes. Perhaps they intend to make the results available online. Actually, they already have in their audio collection a digitized set of the tapes, which my partner and I, Neal McCabe, used for the currently available Highbridge set (5 hours, 4 cds) when we produced it in 1998. I don't know if this digitized version is available for listening at the hall. Ritter also donated a copy of the original tapes to the Joyce Collection of the University of Notre Dame. Here is a link to a list of the full contents, which I'm sure you will find interesting:

http://www.sports.nd.edu/Baseball/ritter.html

Of course, there is tons of fascinating stuff in the 120 hours of the original tapes that didn't make it into the published set. But, after working on this project for many months, we both agreed that the 5-hour limitation we were working with turned out to be oddly perfect for the goals we intended for our set, which was to recreate as much as possible the magic of Larry's book. For us, the material for any kind of a "sequel" just wasn't there, or we would have done one. Virtually everything we really wanted made it into the 5 hours available, and there was very, very, little that we regretted not being able to squeeze in. It was almost as if that was the way it was meant to be.
Hank Thomas
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  #2  
Old 11-30-2010, 06:03 PM
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Bridwell Bridwell is offline
Ron Rice
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Default Ritter

Looking back on it now, Ritter's book did more to fuel my interest in pre-war baseball cards than anything else. Prior to reading it, I was more interested in players from the 1930's to 1950's. Great book!
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  #3  
Old 12-04-2010, 08:21 AM
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WillowGrove WillowGrove is offline
Peter F
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Default The Tapes

Quote:
Originally Posted by Hankphenom View Post
The Hall of Fame is starting a 3-year project to digitize their entire collection, which includes Ritter's original reel-to-reel audio tapes. Perhaps they intend to make the results available online. Actually, they already have in their audio collection a digitized set of the tapes, which my partner and I, Neal McCabe, used for the currently available Highbridge set (5 hours, 4 cds) when we produced it in 1998. I don't know if this digitized version is available for listening at the hall. Ritter also donated a copy of the original tapes to the Joyce Collection of the University of Notre Dame. Here is a link to a list of the full contents, which I'm sure you will find interesting:

http://www.sports.nd.edu/Baseball/ritter.html

Of course, there is tons of fascinating stuff in the 120 hours of the original tapes that didn't make it into the published set. But, after working on this project for many months, we both agreed that the 5-hour limitation we were working with turned out to be oddly perfect for the goals we intended for our set, which was to recreate as much as possible the magic of Larry's book. For us, the material for any kind of a "sequel" just wasn't there, or we would have done one. Virtually everything we really wanted made it into the 5 hours available, and there was very, very, little that we regretted not being able to squeeze in. It was almost as if that was the way it was meant to be.
Hank Thomas

Wow. So I guess I owe you thanks Hank for coming out with the CD. Do you (or does anyone) know if there are any photos of the interviews or of the subjects themselves? I would love to see where Hans Lobert was living and to see that creaking chair? Also - in the Goose Goslin interview it sounds like Ritter had his son with him - is that true?

And where is Babe's bat the Chief Meyer speaks of?

That book is the reason why I'm on this forum today.

and the creation of the internet
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  #4  
Old 12-05-2010, 08:49 PM
Hankphenom Hankphenom is offline
Hank Thomas
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[QUOTE=WillowGrove;852668]Wow. So I guess I owe you thanks Hank for coming out with the CD. Do you (or does anyone) know if there are any photos of the interviews or of the subjects themselves? I would love to see where Hans Lobert was living and to see that creaking chair? Also - in the Goose Goslin interview it sounds like Ritter had his son with him - is that true?

And where is Babe's bat the Chief Meyer speaks of?

That's a great question about photos from Ritter's journeys. I never thought to ask him, and now I wish I had. I'm guessing Larry never took any, or he would have shown them to us at some point during the process of making the audio set. We interviewed him at great length about his experiences with each of the players, and then edited the results to create his introduction to each player segment. I think he would certainly have shown us corresponding photos if there had been any. The only reason he recorded the interviews, he told us, was so he wouldn't be distracted by having to take notes, a brilliant decision in retrospect, not just because the interviews were preserved intact, but because I'm sure they would have gone much differently if the players had been forced to repeat things, or speak more slowly, etc., so Larry could get them written down. He never dreamed there would ever be any interest in hearing any of the interviews, he said. In fact, he never really thought there would ever be a book!

As explained in the booklet accompanying the set, that is, indeed, Stevie Ritter being grilled by the Goose at the end of his interview. Then in his early teens, Stevie was the technician for the interviews, charged by his dad with the responsibility of operating the German tape recorder, the best portable recorder money could buy. Larry told us he mostly wanted his son, who lived with Larry's ex-wife, along for the bonding experience between them. Also heard prominently in the Goslin segment is Larry's girlfriend at the time, Barbara. Her participation worked fine in the Goose's case, because the pretty young lady brought out his flirtatious side and really brought the old man to life, but Larry told us he soon decided that she was ruining the interviews with her interruptions and inane bantering, so he barred her from the interviews. Unfortunately for Larry's love life, she took it personally.

And where is that bat, the one the Babe gave to the Chief?
Hank Thomas
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  #5  
Old 01-08-2012, 06:13 PM
GoudeyJim GoudeyJim is offline
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It would be interesting to talk to Stevie Ritter today and get his memories of the interviews.
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  #6  
Old 01-09-2012, 10:28 AM
Cy2009 Cy2009 is offline
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Hank,

I will give Larry the ultimate thanks for this great piece of work. But we also owe you and Neal a huge thank you for putting the CD set together before the tapes could have been destroyed.

Hank and I have talked about this so many times. I have listened to these tapes easily a hundred times, probably getting closer to 150 now. Each time I love hearing the men tell about the vintage days. And each time while I am driving on vacation or a long trip, I get a big urge to buy some card or sets of cards because of the stories told and I usually go straight to a computer when I reach my destination, looking for something to buy. The CD set is THE best baseball medium, period.

Thanks again, Hank.

Cy
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  #7  
Old 01-09-2012, 12:01 PM
Rich Klein Rich Klein is offline
Rich Klein
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Default @Mike

We did play the CD's from the Glory of the Their Times from one of the times I went to Boiling Out.

Also, many of the people who visited Mr. Ritter were SABR friends of mine from the NY Club and they loved visiting him and he loved seeing them as well

Rich
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  #8  
Old 01-09-2012, 06:43 PM
Ericc22 Ericc22 is offline
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Just want to chime in here and let you know how much I love this book, and the audio in particular. Would love to get access to the extended interviews?

I assume that the only edition available to the public is the nearly 5 hour version? Want to make sure I am not missing anything!

Eric

Last edited by Ericc22; 01-09-2012 at 06:44 PM.
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