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Thursday, February 28, 2019

Mercedes-Benz and its Long History in Formula 1





One-two finish at the Grand Prix of Pau, 8 April 1939. Winner Hermann Lang
 in the Mercedes-Benz 3-litre Formula racing car (W 154). Manfred von Brauchitsch takes second place

Formula 1 is regarded as the premier class of motorsport. Mercedes-Benz is one of the most successful brands ever in this racing series, most recently in 2018 with the fourth World Championship going to Lewis Hamilton with Mercedes-AMG Petronas Motorsport as well as the fifth consecutive constructor's title and driver's title. This anniversary newsletter summarizes the history of the involvement.
Stuttgart. On 17 March 2019, the new Formula 1 season kicks off with the Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne. Mercedes-AMG Petronas Motorsport will once again be competing with two cars and drivers ─ Lewis Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas ─ to continue an unprecedented series of successes. From 2014 to 2018, the team has won five drivers' world championships and five constructors' world championships in a row.
One could say that the will to compete is in the genes of the brand. Daimler engines lay the foundation for success at the world's first automotive race held from Paris to Rouen in 1894. Other important triumphs soon follow. Even after the turn of the century, predecessor brands Benz and Mercedes and ─ as of 1926 ─ the Mercedes-Benz brand continue to dominate the international racing scene.
The years spanning from 1934 to 1939 are a brilliant epoch in European motorsport while also representing an outstanding era in the motorsport history of Mercedes-Benz as the silver arrows from Stuttgart keep on winning prominent European races. At this time, Mercedes-Benz wins three European Championship titles, which are comparable to today's Formula 1 World Championship titles. Numerous other racing victories and sensational records are also racked up.
Formula 1 as defined by the FIA (Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile) is first held as an official sporting event in 1950 and continues the tradition of the European Grand Prix Championship. Mercedes-Benz is still busy trying to revitalize its business after the Second World War but follows the events very closely. The brand is looking to regain success in international motorsport as quickly as possible and tests the competitiveness of the pre-war W 154 at two races in Argentina in 1951. Securing two second places, it does quite well, although the fast, yet heavy vehicle is no longer capable of winning in the current racing environment. The Stuttgart-based firm chooses a pragmatic but very successful path toward launching a new beginning as the 300 SL racing sports car (W 194) is developed for the 1952 season based on the new 300 passenger car (W 186). It becomes the dominant vehicle of the season ─ the only one it ever participates in. In 1953, Mercedes-Benz is already focusing entirely on entering Formula 1 as of 1954, when the new regulations stipulating a maximum displacement of 2.5 litres go into force.
The return of the Silver Arrows
The new W 196 R racing car is created for this purpose. And it meets all expectations. In the car's very first race ─ the French Grand Prix on 4 July 1954 in Rheims ─ Juan Manuel Fangio and Karl Kling take a one-two finish. The winning streak continues, and at the end of this premiere season, Fangio is Formula 1 World Champion.
With the more advanced Grand Prix car and the 300 SLR racer (W 196 S) based on it, the racing division embarks on a "double hunt" in 1955. After all, Mercedes-Benz is looking to repeat its title win in Grand Prix sport as well as score points in the World Sportscar Championship. And the work pays off as Fangio once again becomes Formula 1 World Champion, while Stirling Moss wins the runner-up title. The brand also wins the World Sportscar Championship as well as the European Rally Championship.
At the height of its racing success, Mercedes-Benz withdraws from motorsport at the end of 1955 in order to focus on expanding its range of production cars. Following numerous endurance race and rally wins, the brand does not return to the racetrack until the 1980s, when it hits the tarmac with racing and touring cars. The successes achieved in the World Sports Car Championship, German Touring Car Championship and German Touring Car Masters (DTM) from 1988 to 2018 are nothing short of outstanding.
In 1994, Mercedes-Benz returns to Formula 1 with its Sauber-Mercedes (1994) and McLaren-Mercedes (1995 and later) teams. During this time, Mika Häkkinen wins two (1998 and 1999) and Lewis Hamilton one world championship title (2008). The West-McLaren-Mercedes team also becomes the 1998 Constructors' Champion. This is supplemented by being runners up ten times.
Embarking on a new era with its own works team
A new era comes into view in 2010, when Mercedes-Benz returns to Formula 1 with its own works team and signs on top driver Michael Schumacher, who is replaced by Lewis Hamilton after his retirement in the 2013 season, as well as Nico Rosberg. In 2008, Hamilton becomes the youngest world champion in Formula 1's history at just 23 years of age. From 2010 to 2012, he stands centre stage on the podium of a Grand Prix race no fewer than ten times. Nico Rosberg celebrates his first GP victory with a Silver Arrow at the race in Shanghai in 2012 while also claiming the first victory for Mercedes-AMG Petronas Motorsport. As the 2013 season draws to a close, the works team second place in the Constructors' Championship.
The 2014 season marks the beginning of another golden age for the Silver Arrows as the team goes on to win five World Championship one-two victories in a row: from 2014 to 2018, Mercedes-AMG Petronas Motorsport is the Formula 1 Constructors' World Champion. The driver's titles are won a total of four times by Lewis Hamilton (2014, 2015, 2017 and 2018) and once by Nico Rosberg (2016). This is added to by three runner-up titles in the Drivers' Championship won by Nico Rosberg (2014 and 2015) and Lewis Hamilton (2016), and a third-place title won by Valtteri Bottas (2017).
With this brilliant record, Mercedes-Benz has become one of the most successful brands in Formula 1. Active involvement in the Formula E racing programme for battery-powered racing cars ─ which is scheduled to begin at the end of 2019 ─ also follows on from this. As such, this marks the beginning of a new era as motorsport forms an essential component of the Mercedes-Benz DNA.

Grand Prix of Belgium in Spa-Francorchamps, 5 June 1955. Later winner Juan Manuel Fangio in a Mercedes-Benz Formula 1 racing car (W 196 R)

Wednesday, February 27, 2019

Bertha Benz Featured at the Mercedes-Benz Museum


Live radio play “My dream is longer than the night” in the Mercedes-Benz Museum from 3 to 5 May 2019. Performances at the Studio Theatre Stuttgart, June 2018. Credit Stephan Haase.

From 3 to 5 May 2019, the live radio play “My dream is longer than the night”, which recounts the life of mobility pioneer Bertha Benz, is showing at the Casino in the Mercedes-Benz Museum. The production, which has already enjoyed considerable success at the Studio Theatre in Stuttgart, can be seen at two evening and two family performances on the 170th anniversary of the birthday (3 May) and the 75th anniversary of the death of Bertha Benz (5 May). Advance tickets are available from 27 February 2019 on mercedes-benz.com/museum
Stuttgart. A powerful story, minimalist set, imaginatively generated sound effects and powerful oration: a live radio play blends elements of theatre, reading and traditional radio drama to create an exciting stage performance. From 3 to 5 May 2019, acting trio Susanne Theil (Bertha Benz), Martin Bonvicini (Carl Benz) and Boris Rosenberger (multiple roles) will be staging this event, “My dream is longer than the night”, at the Mercedes-Benz Museum.
The piece takes the members of the audience back to the late 19th century and involves them in the fascinating life story of mobility pioneer Bertha Benz. Children aged eight and above are invited to participate in the two interactive family shows: they will be able to assist the actors from their seats in the auditorium by producing background noises such as steam hissing and the wind blowing.
This live radio play event takes place four times from 3 to 5 May 2019 in the Casino on the top floor of the Mercedes-Benz Museum. The performances mark the occasions of the 170th birthday (3 May 2019) and the 75th anniversary of the death (5 May 2019) of Bertha Benz.
Stuttgart director and author Günter Maurer has produced this fascinating performance on the basis of the book “My dream is longer than the night. How Bertha Benz powered her husband to world fame” by Angela Elis (published in 2010 by Hoffmann und Campe).
Take a break with a patent motor car
The two family shows are scheduled for 4 May at 2 pm and 5 May at 11 am. After each show, there is an opportunity to admire an authentic replica of the Benz patent motorcar in operation outside the Mercedes-Benz Museum. Individual rides can be arranged.
During the two evening performances on 3 May and 4 May at 7.30 pm, the world’s first motorcar will also be playing a role: during the intermission, guests at the live radio play will be able to visit the area called Mythos 1 in the permanent exhibition and see the patent motorcar and Gottlieb Daimler’s motor carriage.
Tickets for the live radio play cost 14 euros for adults (reduced 7 euros) and admission is free for children up to and including the age of 14. All the tickets for the live audio play also entitle the holder to visit the Mercedes-Benz Museum on the same day, which is open until 7.30 pm. The tickets are available here www.mercedes-benz.com/museum. Advance ticket sale begins on 27 February.
One of the great stories of our day
This motorcar pioneer is born on 3 May 1849 in Pforzheim as Bertha Ringer. At the age of 23, she marries Carl Benz and soon becomes a crucial supporter of his professional activities. After the invention of the automobile in 1886, Bertha realises that this groundbreaking innovation lacks, among other things, a good public relations approach. Initially, people are sceptical about the new means of transport.
In August 1888, Bertha Benz resolves to drive from Mannheim to Pforzheim with the later development of the patent motorcar, the Model 3. In doing so, she demonstrates how reliable and simple the operation of the vehicle is and that it can cover a considerable distance. This trip brings Bertha Benz worldwide fame. She dies on 5 May 1944, two days after her 95th birthday. The life of the mobility pioneer is one of the great stories of our day.
The actors of the live audio play “My dream is longer than the night” about the play and their roles:
Susanne Theil completed her drama training at the Freiburg drama academy in the E-Werk theatre. Since 2010, she has been working as a freelance actress and is a regular dubbing artist for SWR and other radio stations. “To be allowed to play a woman like Bertha Benz is a real honour. She is strong-willed, fearless, emancipated, energetic and enterprising – yet absolutely modern and ahead of her time. I am impressed by the strength with which this mother of several children is the driving force behind, or better said beside, mostly even in front of, her husband. Every time I experience this blend of acting and oration coupled with the imaginatively generated sound effects that draw the audience into the history of the Benz family, it inspires me anew.”
Martin Bonvicini completed his acting training at the Academy of Performing Arts in Ulm in 2012. Since 2014, he has been working freelance and, to a large extent, as a narrator. “ What fascinates me about ‘My dream is longer than the night’ is above all the frequent interchange between dramatic and technical, between characters and narrative parts. Often we do several things at once – that’s quite a challenge and great fun.”
Boris Rosenberger learnt his acting skills in Stuttgart. In addition to his stage work as a freelance actor, he has also appeared in television productions, directed a musical production with children and holds acting workshops. “To make the life of Bertha and Carl Benz so real and tangible in a live radio play and slipping into so many different roles in doing so has become a great experience for myself. Presenting this now in the Mercedes-Benz Museum, at the birthplace of mobility, as it were, and to involve the audience in such fun, is my personal dream, which, by the way, also lasts longer than the night.”
The Mercedes-Benz Museum is open Tuesdays to Sundays from 9 am to 6 pm. Last admission is at 5 pm. Registration, reservations and latest information: Monday to Sunday from 9 am to 6 pm by telephone on +49 (0)711-30000, by email to classic@daimler.com or online at http://www.mercedes-benz.com/museum.

Monday, February 25, 2019

A Brief Review of Jimmy Dinsmore and James Halderman, "Mustang by Design: Gale Halderman and the Creation of Ford's Iconic Pony Car"



This is  review that has come off the top of my head after reading through Mustang by Design. If I were to write a formal review, I would have taken notes along the way and then reviewed those notes before putting things down on paper (or on the screen, in this case!). So my thoughts here are far more impressionistic rather than introspective.
I have owned two Mustangs during my lifetime, starting with a 1966 6-cylinder Vintage Burgundy coupe and then 1990 4-cylinder Cranberry Red convertible. They may well have been the best cars I have owned, although a car guy would say that they were vastly underpowered. True, but to me they were still enjoyable, and in the case of the 1966, it was the car that I used during my courtship of the girl I would marry and remain married to for nearly 50 years now!
On to the book about the Mustang's principal designer, Gale Halderman and his creation. At first glance one might conclude that this is a hagiographic picture book featuring Gale and the Mustang, and that would be half right. But it is far more than that. The narrative is informational about the design process and key figures involved in the Mustang story. It also traces the evolution of the Mustang's design to the near present.  And it has design feature insights that I have not read anywhere else.
Having lived in Dayton, Ohio for nearly 35 years I have yet to appreciate its fertile environment related to creativity and invention. I became enthralled with the story of Gale attending the Dayton Art Institute during the 1950s and his relationship with Professor Read Viemeister. I had heard that Dayton was a source for a number of clay modeling hires at General Motors in the 1950s, but I think there is a bigger connection between the DAI and Big Three design studios than is commonly known. One "gem" from this book and I am only on page 14!
The story slowly unfolds then, starting with the 1957 Ford ( a favorite of mine since my much older cousin bought one new in 1957 with a Thunderbird engine). the Ford Falcon, sketches, the place of Lee Iacocca, Hal Sperlich, Don Frey, Gene Bordinat, and Joe Orgs follows. And of course a climax takes place at the New York World's Fair in the spring of 1964 when the public introduction takes place.
I will leave it to you to further explore this fine book. The images (and excellent descriptive) captions tell a story by themselves. Finally, there is a chapter on the Gale Halderman barn located in Tipp City, Ohio, where memorabilia and cars tell Gale's story. I hope get there on day and learn far more about one of the most important vehicles of the 20th century in America.

Sunday, February 24, 2019

Machines and Music: Capturing the Sounds of Sports and Race Cars

The basis for a presentation I will give at the HVA/SAH Conference in Allentown, PA, April 13, 2019

“Machines and Music: Capturing the Sounds of Sports and Race Cars”

John Heitmann
Department of History
University of Dayton
300 College Park
Dayton, OH 45469-1540
Copyright 2019.


Racing, when you get right down to it, is about the sound as much as anything. It's music. Those engines, they grab you in the gut. It's a sacred sound, a siren cry, a raw and cruel symphony. Men have died for it.… A racetrack is never completely silent. The motors echo across the generations.[i]– Author Matthew DeBord (2017).

During the past decade historians and sociologists of technology, including Karin Bijsterveld, Stefan Krebs, Gijs Mom, Michael Bull and John Urry, have explored the topic of automotive sounds.[ii]  Drawing on the seminal work of Canadian composer R. Murray Schafer, these European and British scholars have examined the “silencing” of the automobile, beginning with the closed car of the 1920s and ending with contemporary “sonic bubbles” and “mobile capsules.”[iii]Humorously, perhaps, Schafer concluded that the best approximation of the sound emanating from an internal combustion engine’s exhaust is “a fart,” noting that both come from the rear![iv]How apt, given that Tuner car mufflers are called fart cans! Seriously, however, Schafer’s enlightening scholarship on the automobile and indeed the broader Industrial Revolution focused on phenomena that negatively affected Western soundscapes.[v]Nevertheless, I want to go in an entirely opposite direction, exploring race cars and production sports cars and the music (and at times noise) that they make on and off the track.
Indeed, these high performance vehicles make music amidst a sea of noise. They escaped what German historian Kurt Moser called the process of “desportification,” a transition that began in the 1920s.  “Desportification “ proved to be a set of technological improvements that redefined the everyday motoring experience. Driving in increasingly refined “capsules” became more of a habit and less of an art, as operations were simplified and the ride made more comfortable.[vi]
To anyone driving an old school sports car or attending a race, noise and music are at the heart of it all. As Robert Daley described the sound in his The Cruel Sport 
At the pits there is constant commotion—and colossal noise. Drivers coming in to complain about their cars must shout over their own engine noise and that of other engines being revved up and down nearby. Mechanics shout (right), engineers shout, wives shout. Everybody shouts. Engine fumes rise all about. The fumes are sweet, sharp, the distinctive odor of motor racing. But moistly the pit area, during practice, is ear-splitting noise.[vii]


Until the coming of noise restrictions during the late 1950s and 1960s, sports cars on the street were about their blare, or to the ears of the enthusiast, music. Tom McCahill, writing in 1954 on a book dedication page about his late dog Joe, reminisced that “anyone who came to my house in a sports car was always welcome, especially if it had a deep exhaust roar. Extra nice Detroit owners were tolerated.” [viii]It was said that Triumph TR2s equipped with an original Burgess silencer “barked.”[ix]In his widely read The Red Car,Don Sanford, waxed eloquently that “There is no music on earth like the song of high-tuned engines, rising and falling in the near distance, belligerently screaming the wild fierce defiant challenge of one fast car to another.”[x]

 Journalist Ken Purdy echoed similar sentiments about track sounds in a conversation with Stirling Moss in 1963:
The straight is the place to listen…. A few weeks ago I was listening to a race in France on the radio, and the cars were going past the microphone, and I said to somebody who was with me: ‘That Ferrari is in F-sharp’ – and of course I was told it was an absurd idea, I was out of my mind. And a coupe of weeks later Anthony Hopkins, the composer… was on B.B.C. and he was talking about the musical sound cars make in passing a given point. They’re all quite different. Of course they have to be wound right out, the faster the engine is turning, the better; and there’s that up and down as they come and go past a point, you know, the Doppler Effect. Of course you hear none of it, driving.[xi]

*****
Doing history often gets personal for me, and the story that follows is a prime example of why I chose the topics I pursue. For some time, I have been interested in the history of sports cars in the U.S., particularly during the 1950s when sports car sales and SCCA participation took off. How did in the space of a decade were there a half a million sports cars on American roads and 20,000 “embryonic racers,” when you could count them on your hands before WWII?[xii]On the surface, it was the result of rising middle class expectations and ambitions, a response to the ungainly Detroit “dinosaur in the driveway.”  And as a teenager during the mid-1960s I got caught up in it, as I purchased a 1959 MGA after graduating from high school. But perhaps even more significantly, at age 12 I acquired the Riverside Records LP “Vintage Sports Car in Stereo.” On one side the record featured the sounds of a number of vintage cars I had never heard of before: a Frazer-Nash; Type 51 Bugatti; E.R.A.; P3 Alfa Romero; Alta; V16 Maserati. On the flip side a vintage race was narrated by the famous David Scott-Moncrieff. I played that record over and over again, much to the anguish of my parents who thought I had gone over some sort of an adolescent cliff.  But as I have discovered from recent conversations, many others joined me in this obsession with the sounds of exotic motor cars.
 Today sounds are often a part of cars & coffee and weekly cruise-in events. A Saturday in October is devoted to sounds at the Porsche Museum in Stuttgart. However during 1950s and 1960s (and today if you have the LPs) thunderous but also harmonic engine sounds could be heard in your home as well as on the track and street.
The Riverside Records story is worth telling, for it links 1950s jazz sounds with the concurrent burgeoning interest in sports cars. The Riverside label began in 1952 with the partnership of two Columbia graduates, Bill Grauer, Jr. and Orrin Keepnews. Seeing an opportunity to approach major record firms with a proposal to counter what was then seen as the release of “pirate” recordings of performances dating back to the 1920s and 30s, between 1952 and 1962 Grauer and Keepnews transformed the once-obscure Riverside Records into a major jazz label. Initially Grauer convinced RCA Victor to re-issue 78s from the 1920s and 30s in LP format. However, he then shifted focus to the contemporary music of Thelonious Monk, Randy Weston, Bill Evans, Sonny Rollins and Cannonball Adderly. Additionally, the partners established themselves by writing a definitive book on the history of jazz in the U.S, published by Crown in 1956 and reissued in 1971. In the midst of this artistic and business success, Grauer, like many upper middle class men of the day, also became a sports car enthusiast. 
In a 1961 interview in his New York City office that featured a large photo of Bill behind the wheel of a 1937 Mercedes-Benz, he recounted how in “1956, just for fun, we recorded sounds of sports-car races down at Sebring, Florida (I’m a racing nut, you know). We decided to release it and then the roof fell in. It began to sell like crazy.”[xiii]Thus this experiment into the commercial recording of sports car sounds It began with RLP 5001 -- "Sounds of Sebring:  The 1956 Florida International Twelve-Hour Grand Prix of Endurance." Grauer recalled "At Sebring, everybody has problems and for the most part all this worry and fuss is just for the fun of it. And because it's for the fun of it, Sebring is a terribly wonderfully exciting spectacle."

The most unusual sound recording's A side began with interviews of drivers, a prelude to the listener experiencing "sounds at rest:" a 3 liter Maserati; 3.5 liter Ferrari; a Lotus; and finally a Porsche Spyder. Driver interviews connected us to ghosts from the past: Stirling Moss;Jean Behra and Carlos Medniteguy;Pochirio Rubirosa;Peter Collins;Bill Spear; Juan Manuel Fangio; John Gordon Bennett;Reg Parnell;Marquis de Portago; and finally Luigi Musso.The flip side included hour-by-hour reports of the 12-hour race. 

Who do you think would care about all of this? But this was not a one-off exercise, for over the next seven years many other vinyl discs of racing sounds and exotic cars would follow, and amuse a generation of sports car enthusiasts. A label with a reputation for jazz recording left a legacy for the automotive historian to explore.An advertisement in the December 1956 Sports Cars Illustrated touted the “Sounds of Sebring” album this way: 
For the first time ever: a superb high quality 12 inch long playing record of all the sounds that make up America’s greatest sports car race. Over 60 minutes of interviews with the world’s greatest drivers…Fangio, Moss, Collins, Behra, Hill, Musso, Menditeguy, Bennett, Rubirosa, Portago, Parnell. The sounds of Ferraris, Maseratis, Jags, Aston Martins, Porsche, Corvettes, Lotus, etc. warming up, revving, roaring at speed, coming out of corners flat out.  The fabulous Le Mans start, pit activity, the fantastic sounds of Fangio shifting up and down as he makes the five mile circuit, and dozens of other remarkable on the-spot sounds which are so exciting to the driver and spectator alike.[xiv]

            Other releases that followed the “Sounds of Sebring” included the chronicling of the Sebring races between 1957 and 1962. These records not only were a reflection of the burgeoning interest in sports car racing, but they also played a significant role in making it happen. Certainly, the course at Sebring was nothing special.[xv]Robert Daley argued that “There is much mysterious about the Sebring promotion. In every possible way, the site is ridiculous, the circuit unexciting (the Twelve Hours qualifies as one of the dullest events of the year), and the “success“ of the race inexplicable.”[xvi]
            Additionally to recording car and race sounds, drivers were featured on numerous LPs. In 1957, for example, titles included “The Marquis de Portago: The Story of Racing’s Most Colorful Driver – a Memorial Tribute;” “Phil Hill: Around the Racing Circuit with a Great American Driver;” “Carroll Shelby: The Career of a Great American Racing Driver;” and “Stirling Moss: A Portrait of Britain’s Great Racing Driver, Told in his Own Words.”  These recordings then serve as primary source material not only of the races and the engine sounds – distinct of brand and vintage, a sort of original language speaking to us – but also of the best drivers of the day, speaking in their own words. But we can’t neglect the focus on sounds. 

The theme here, then is engine noise: exhaust, valve, camshaft.  The variation on the theme are endless. As long as men design and build engines, there'll be enthusiasts trying to make them perform better. When they blow up, they'll simply build engines that won't blow up. The automobile is unique in the history of civilization. It has provided man with effortless transportation -- freed him, as it were, from the bounds of his physical limitations. And to the men who own and run these cars, it is given, more than to most men, to create as well as to savor the magic bouquet of speed.[xvii]

Another aspect of the Riverside Records sports car series is also worth mentioning. Namely, the record jackets are often works of art in their own right. The work of Bill’s wife, Jane Grauer, the covers are at times stunning representations of cars, engines, wire wheels, race scenes and Bugatti grills.  
For a short time in 1956 Riverside had competition from another distinguished recording studio, Folkways Records. Folkways released a 12-inch vinyl disk and an accompanying brochure about the Watkins Glen Grand Prix race, with “on one side of the resulting record you go to tech inspection and meet the Grand Prix winner, while on the other side brings you the ear splitting and soul shaking music of the race.”  The Folkways production was the result of Henry Mandler and Robert Strome using state-of-the-art high fidelity equipment, including an Ampex 400 tape recorder, Capps, Electrovoice and Shure microphones, and over 400 feet of power cords and audio cables.[xviii]A second competitor to Riverside proved to be Grand Prix Records of Burbank, California. In 1959 this firm released six 45 RPM disks of the 1957 Le Mans race; Grand Prix of Europe, 1958; Grand Prix of Monaco, 1957; British Empire Trophy Race; British Grand Prix of Silverstone, 1958, RAC British Grand Prix 1955 at Aintree and 1956 at Silverstone; and the 1958 Mercedes at Oulton Park.[xix]Unlike the Riverside and Folkways recordings, however, the later have proved to be far more elusive to collectors.
*****
During more recent times ex-Pink Floyd drummer Nick Mason and collaborator Mark Hales revisited the theme of sound and race cars with the 1998 publication of Into the Red,a book that included an accompanying CD. A number of the cars whose sounds were reproduced by Mason and Hales were also featured in the Riverside series. 
Given the technical description of the pains taken to capture exhaust engine and track sounds in 1998, a renewed appreciation of Grauer’s pioneering efforts emerges. The powerful ignition magnetos in Mason’s race cars resulted in electric interference that hampered state of the art microphones. Despite the challenges, the Into the RedCD reproduces a music like no other.
   Musician Mason has the ear, sensitivity and prose to capture the sounds of cars on the track at Silverstone that Riverside Records had captured at Oulton Park, in Yorkshire some 40 years before.  Mason described the sounds emanating from a 1931 Alfa 8C 2300 as
It’s more of a boom than a rip. Push in the ignition key to switch on the electrics and illuminate the starter button. The electric motor whirrs the eight pistons past compression with barely a stutter and the Alfa gently comes alive, moaning and chuffing as a thousand pieces of metal bump and grind before bathing themselves in a fresh coating of lubricant. And then, as you wait to warm the oil, there’s more to be had by listening carefully, just as with any good piece of music. You can hear the boom become the bass, and now there’s a gentle wail from the supercharger, which swells as you rev up, disappears when you lift off. Just beneath that there’s another, more musical warble from the exhaust. Not the demented pigeon noise of a modern five-cylinder Audi, but a more orchestrated, subtler kind of rhythm, like a string bass shimmering in the background.[xx]

Music is often made by instruments – technologies not that dissimilar from machines including internal combustion engines. Those musical instruments or machines reflect the work of human beings who very creatively made power and awe out of the combustion of artifacts and those players or drivers that blow their stuff in unique ways.
            Another example of Mason’s genius in articulating the musical tones of a race engine comes from a 1936 ERA at idle:

The ERA makes a noise like a bass saxophone and cello in duet. The strings are the tremendous whine of the supercharger that feeds the one and a half litre six cylinder engine and the sax is the rich, reedy, deep-throated, metallic sound of the exhaust…. A supercharged methanol-fueled exhaust note is deeper and richer than anything you will hear today…. It brings a smile to the lips.[xxi]



Rarely is one consumer technology worshipped alone. Art, jazz, and sports cars, along with watches and cameras, all came together during the 1950s and 1960s. Riverside Records, still recognized for its achievements in the arts, also left a legacy in automotive history. The sounds from an automobile reflect what is under the hood, and what the owner of that car values.

Discography – Riverside Records on Sports Cars, Racing, and Miscellaneous Motor Sports

Riverside 5000 series (12 inch LP)
·      RLP 5001 - Sounds Of Sebring 1956
·      RLP 5002 - Sports Cars In Hi-Fi
·      RLP 5003 - Pit Stop
·      RLP 5004   interview - Stirling Moss
·      RLP 5005   interview - Phil Hill
·      RLP 5006   interview - Carroll Shelby
·      RLP 5007   interview - The Marquis De Portago
·      RLP 5008/5009 - Sounds Of Sebring 1957
·      RLP 5010 - Cuban Corners
·      RLP 5011  - Sounds Of Sebring 1958
·      RLP 5012  - Mercedes-Benz
·      RLP 5013  - Vintage Sports Cars In Hi-Fi
·      RLP 5014 - Sounds Of Sebring 1959
·      RLP 5015 - Sports Cars At Sebring In Hi-Fi
·      RLP 5016 - Grand Prix Of The U.S. Sebring 1959
·      RLP 5017 - Grand Prix Cars In Action At Sebring
·      RLP 5018  - Sounds Of Sebring 1960
·      RLP 5019   Paul O'Shea - Sing A Song Of Sports Cars
·      RLP 5020 - The Race Mercedes-Benz 1937-1955
·      RLP 5021 - Grand Prix Of The U.S. 1960
·      RLP 5022 - Farewell To A Formula
·      RLP 5023 - Sounds Of Sebring 1961
·      RLP 5024 - Sebring Corners
·      RLP 5025/5026  - 75 Years Of Mercedes-Benz
·      RLP 5027 - Sounds Of Sebring 1962
·      RLP 5028 - Grand Prix Cars At Watkins Glen
Riverside 5500 series (12 inch LP)
·      RLP 5501 - Bullring
·      RLP 5502 - Hot Rods And Dragsters
·      RLP 5503 - Hot Rods In Action
·      RLP 5504  - On The Drag Strip
·      RLP 5506  - Griff Borgeson Presents Bonneville 1960 - Sounds On The Salt Flats
·      RLP 5509  - Hot Rod Heaven
·      RLP 5515 - Hot Cars At Winternationals
·      RLP 5516   V.S. - Super Stocks
·      RLP 5517 - Rods 'N' Rails
·      RLP 5518 - Hot Rods, Dragsters And Super Stocks
·      RLP 5519 - Burning Slicks
·      RLP 5520 - Hot Rods And Dragsters
·      Discography from https://www.jazzdisco.org/riverside-records/catalog-5000-5500-5700-7000-box-set-series/album-index/
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[i]Matthew DeBord, Return to Glory: The Story of Ford’s Revival and Victory at the Toughest Race in the World (New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 2017), pp.216-7.
[ii]Karin Bijsterveld, Eefje Cleophas, Stefan Krebs and Gijs Mom, Sound and Safe: A History of Listening Behind the Wheel.Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014. Stefan Krebs, “’Sobbing, Whining, Rumbling’: Listening to Automobiles as Social Practice,” The Oxford Handbook of Sound Studies, 80-101. See also Michael Bull, “Automobility and the Power of Sound,” Theory, Culture & Society, 21(4/5), 243-259; Mimi Sheller, “Automotive Emotions: Feeling the Car,” Ibid., 221-242.
[iii]Sound and Safe, p.6; R. Murray Schafer, Our Sonic Environment and the Soundscape. The Tuning of the World(Rochester, Vermont: Destiny Books, 1977, 1994).
[iv]Schafer, p.84.
[v]Sound and Safe, p.13.
[vi]On Moser, see “Der Kampf des Automobilisten mit der Maschine” – Eine Skizze der Vermittlung der Autotechnik und des Fahrenlernens im 20. Jahrhundert, in L. Bluma, etal., eds, Technikvermittlung und Technik Popularisierung (Münster:Waxmann, 2004).
[vii]Robert Daley, The Cruel Sport (St. Paul, MN: Motorbooks, 2005). p.82.
[viii]Tom McCahill, The Modern Sports Car (New York: Prentice Hall, 1954), dedication page.
[ix]Graham Robson, The Triumph TRs: A Collector’s Guide (London: Motor Racing Publications, 1980), p. 18.
[x]Don Stanford, The Red Car(Catchogue, New York: Buccaneer Books, 1954), p. 214.
[xi]From Stirling Moss, Face to Face with Ken Purdy, All But My Life (New York: E.P. Dutton & Co., 1963), p. 78.
[xii]Robert Daley, Cars at Speed: The Grand Prix Circuit(Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott, 1961), p.263.
[xiii]On Grauer and Riverside Records, see “Sound Business,” Newsweek, 58 (September 4, 1961), 63; “Bill Grauer Jr. Obituary,” New York Times, December 17, 1963, 39; John S. Wilson, “Greats of Classic Jazz Ignite a Reissue,” New York Times, January 18, 1987, H25; Orrin Keepnews and Bill Grauer,A Pictorial History of Jazz: People and Places from New Orleans to Modern Jazz(New York: Crown Publishers, 1956).
 [xiv]Sports Cars Illustrated(Here after SCI), October, 1956, 64. Other ads include SCI,January 1957, 47; SCI, May 1957, 55; SCI, June 1957, 11; SCIAugust, 1957, 3; SCI, September, 1958, 3; SCI, March 1959, 3. For a review of the Riverside LP “The Fastest 500,” Riverside RLP 5513, see Road & Track, 13(March 1963), 12.
[xv]On the history of Sebring, see Alec Ulmann, The Sebring Story (Philadelphia:Chilton,1969); On the use of WWII air field runways during the 1950s, see Jeremy R. Kinney, “Racing on Runways: The Strategic Air Command and Sports Car Racing in the 1950s,” ICON,19 (2013), 193-215.
[xvi]Daley, Cars at Speed, p.264. 
[xvii]From the dust jacket of Riverside Records RLP 5002 [1957?]:
[xviii]Folkways FX 6140, “Sounds of the International Sports Car Grand Prix of Watkins Glen, NY,” p.5 of accompanying brochure.
[xix]“You Are There! With Grand Prix Sound Story Records,” SCI, June 1959, 71.
[xx]Nick Mason and Mark Hales, Into the Red: Twenty-One Classic Cars that Shaped a Century of Motor Sport (London: Virgin Books, 1998), p.30.
[xxi]Ibid., p. 44.