Teldec was a producer of (first) shellac and (later) vinyl records. The Teldec manufacturing facility was located in
Nortorf near
Kiel in Germany. The company was founded in 1950 as a co-operation between
Telefunken and
Decca Records. The name Teldec is the result of taking the first three letters of both labels: Telefunken and Decca. Records manufactured by Teldec mostly were released under the Telefunken or Decca label, but normally these records contained no hint that they were made by Teldec. In 1983, Telefunken and Decca pulled out of Teldec and in 1988 Teldec was sold to
Time Warner. In 1997, the remaining compact-disc production facility in Nortorf was to be closed by Time Warner, but after a management buyout, the new company OK Media, continued CD production. In 2001, after the merger of AOL & Time Warner, Teldec closed.
TeD video disc In the early 1970s, Teldec was acting for Telefunken in the development of a disc manufacturing technology for Telefunken's "TeD" video disc player TD1005, released in 1975. The Television Electronic Disc (
TeD) system was more or less a predecessor of the more successful optical Philips
LaserDisc video system, as the TeD system employed the idea of using
FM instead of AM for storing the video signal on a disc for the first time. The TeD video-disc player used a
piezo-electric pick-up cartridge with a diamond stylus, mechanically sampling the
frequency-modulated,
PAL-encoded audio-video signal from thousands of concentric grooves, vertically recorded into the surface of a very thin, flexible vinyl disc. The disc was freely rotating on a thin cushion of air between the disc and a fixed plate at 1500rpm (25 Hz), the disc being stabilized only by
centrifugal force. The sampling frequency of the combined audio-video signal was about 2.7 MHz. Maximum video playing time was ten minutes on a 210 mm disc, amounting to about 15,000 concentric grooves on the disc, each storing two half-frame PAL-video-lines.
Direct Metal Mastering A technological spin-off from the short-lived TeD video system was Teldec's
Direct Metal Mastering technology, called DMM, for the manufacturing of vinyl records: The
cutting lathe engraves and impresses the audio signal (via Blumlein stereo cutting) in the copper-plated
mother disk, instead of in the lacquer coating on an aluminium 'grandmother' disk. This bypasses the need to electroform a father disk, firstly, and reputed allowed better retention of the modulated signals in the groove due to the copper phase not possessing the strong elastic memory of the lacquer coating on traditional blank disks. ==Record label==