High-end enthusiasts had RCA cables. The rest of us had a microphone placed three inches from a boom box. Recording a song from the radio meant you couldn't skip tracks easily. If the DJ talked over the guitar solo, that static was now part of your master recording forever. If you wanted to remove a video’s original audio, you had to turn your TV’s volume to zero while the VCR still recorded the input from your CD player.
Think of it as the analog version of a Spotify playlist, but with a visual aesthetic dictated by the limitations of magnetic tape. Creating a high-quality HMV/PMV was a technical art form. It required mastery of three sacred skills: hmv/pmv
Search for or "80s HMV Tape Rip." There are archivists out there who have digitized their original tapes. Listen to the audio wobble. Watch the clock in the corner of the screen change from 12:00 to 12:00 (because nobody could set the VCR clock). Notice the "Hi-Fi Stereo" banner flash across the screen. High-end enthusiasts had RCA cables
But that noise was the texture.