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173 of 175 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars MiniDisc Recording Comes of Age
I wasn't bowled over by MiniDiscs when they first appeared. I heard there were some audible artifacts of the compression technology which kept these pocket-sized marvels from being a true match for CDs. And the price of the MD machines was more than I wanted to spend. Just the other day, however, I managed to score a Sony MZ-R37 portable MD recorder at an online...
Published on November 21, 1999

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17 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The Swiss Army knife of MD players, only uglier
I bought this unit because it was on sale, but I would recommend that anyone considering this unit take a look at what Sharp has to offer. For a little more money you can get a larger display (my MZ-R37's display is puny and hard to read at most angles - and it can only display 5 letters at a time), a text display on the remote control and, most importantly, both...
Published on October 15, 1999


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173 of 175 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars MiniDisc Recording Comes of Age, November 21, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Sony MZ-R37 Portable Minidisc Player/Recorder (Electronics)
I wasn't bowled over by MiniDiscs when they first appeared. I heard there were some audible artifacts of the compression technology which kept these pocket-sized marvels from being a true match for CDs. And the price of the MD machines was more than I wanted to spend. Just the other day, however, I managed to score a Sony MZ-R37 portable MD recorder at an online auction, and I'm here to say -- jump in, everybody, the format's fine! The truth is, I'm not about to replace my CDs or cassettes or equipment. But I'm a semipro drummer who wanted to get digital quality recordings of rehearsals and jam sessions in a pocket-sized unit. Well, all I can say is -- if there are any audible deficiencies of the MD format, I can't hear them, and as a musician, my ears are pretty good. Although I haven't made a live recording of my band yet, I have been making test recordings all weekend, dubbing CDs of demanding acoustic music like the David Ware Quartet. The MZ-R37 makes and plays back superb recordings that I cannot distinguish from the original CDs; this despite the fact that I'm not using the digital optical hookup available (cord provided). I hear no hiss, wow, or flutter, no glitches between selections, and all instruments are present and accounted for, and sound the way they should. There are no problems with the azimuth misalignments I constantly encountered with cassettes. Recordings of electronic music sound superb too; the Beatles' "Come Together" sounded awesome! I did discover two things I have to get used to with the MD format. The first is the necessity of using the "END SEARCH" button if you have been listening to a recording before you resume recording; otherwise, songs get split in half and weird sequencing events occur. The second is to remember not to push PAUSE before pushing STOP at the end of a recording; every time you push PAUSE on the MZ-R37, it adds a track number. I'm so used to doing that on a cassette deck so as not to introduce a glitch onto the tape between songs. I also discovered that you can make a better recording by overriding the automatic gain control and pumping up the volume, so the peaks hit the top element in the display. In terms of things I would change on this unit, I wish the buttons were a little bigger; my old fingers don't always have the easiest time zeroing in on the button required for a certain function! And I wish the MZ-R37 had a back-lit or electro-luminescent LCD panel you could see in low-light conditions. I predict I'll be pulling out my pocket flashlight on more than one occasion to check levels and disc run status! And some sort of carrying case would have been a more welcome inclusion with this package for me than the cheapo headphones or optical cable included. Live recordists will need a stereo microphone too, one that draws power from the mike input; for sound quality, compactness, and affordable price, it's hard to beat Sony's PC-62 or its successor, if there is one. And that pretty much sums up the Sony MZ-R37 MD Recorder itself too!
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30 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great for beginning concert recording or MP3 recording, November 14, 2000
By 
metheb (Seattle, wa United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Sony MZ-R37 Portable Minidisc Player/Recorder (Electronics)
I bought the MZ-R37 early this summer. I got a refurbished model on Ebay for a resonsable price for recording concerts over the summer. This is a great model, durable and very shock resistant. I purchased a binaural microphone after I recorded a couple shows on a cheaper mono and man what a difference. One major tip if you are starting to record with the MZ-R37 - be sure to hold the record button in place and be sure recording has commenced, I missed some songs at gigs because the recorder didn't start. Better to be safe than sorry. Anyway, this is also great for recording MP3s off of your computer just get a connection line from your sound card to the line in and you are set. You can also transfer concert recordings or band demos onto you computer if you have a recordable sound card. Great investment. Forget about MP3 players, too expensive to add memory. Minidiscs are inexpensive and far more durable than CDs also, with identical sound quality. If you are a music fan I don't know how you could live without one.
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The best Mini Disc I've Seem, January 8, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Sony MZ-R37 Portable Minidisc Player/Recorder (Electronics)
The Sony Mz-R37 is easy to use and very portable. The buttons are easily accessible and the remotes editing functions make titling, deleting, moving tracks on the mini disc easy. The remote allows you to keep your mini disc in its case and still make use of track searching, stopping, and adjusting the volume. I do reccomend that you buy a cable with stereo mini jacks on both sides so you can record from devices that don't have the optical output. This will also allow you to record directly from a portable cd player. The player also includes recharble batteries that have good battery life and can be charged in the mini disc player usding the supplies power adaptor. I strongly recommend that you purchase this mini disc player from Amazon.com like I did. Amazon.com is $50 cheaper than Best Buy and even $100 cheaper than some other stores.
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars perfect recorder, November 9, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Sony MZ-R37 Portable Minidisc Player/Recorder (Electronics)
i don't know how i survived without this! i have had this unit for about six months now and have really appreciated having digital recording in such a small package. although i have made pleanty of mix discs with it, i bought it mainly for field recordings. it's super slim size (it's the slimmest, but not the smallest) and side facing display make it perfect for incognito recordings. i use a set of omnidirectional stero earbud mics and get no machine noise and with the auto level setting, hardly ever any signal overload. i thought that the remote would be dissappointing because it does not have a built-in display (like earlier sony models), but after you memorize the layout where you don't have to look at it, the lightweight "stick" is actually preferable. 2-position mega-bass feature kicks. only complaints: battery life could be better. it has a great "on board" recharge feature, but i found that after only a hanfull of recharges, the life was down to 50% of conventional batteries. you get about 6 hours of playback or about 2 hours of recording time on one charge. also, there is an annoying beep which accompanies any command - unlike most md players you can not turn this feature off. it is especially loud and annoying when you have it hooked up to your car stero. but don't plan on cranking this machine, because the volume only goes up to "30" (literally 30% of what you're used to on a regular walkman), which is not loud enough for me- especially with decent headphones.
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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great mini device for recording and playing digitally., November 9, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Sony MZ-R37 Portable Minidisc Player/Recorder (Electronics)
The MZ-R37 has better recording capabilities than I imagined when using the Sony digital microphone (stereo, approx. $100). The placement of the control buttons on the unit is somewhat inconvenient: however, they work well when the unit is in a small case or pocket during recording.

The 40 sec anti-skip is only for sudden bumps - don't try to jog with this machine. The clooapsible headphones are a plus, and the remote is easy to use. You will need to purchase a mini to mini cord for recording from another source, unless it'a a device that has an optical output.

Overall, this is a great machine.

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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The best recording device I have ever used., January 17, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Sony MZ-R37 Portable Minidisc Player/Recorder (Electronics)
I was torn between purchasing either a CD-RW drive for my computer, a stand alone CD-RW audio component, or a MD recorder. I took a chance and spent the money on the Sony MD Recorder, and I have been basking in the glory of this tiny digital device. The MZ-R37 is a little bigger than an audio cassette case, and is completely versatile.

--Why I chose it over another type of audio recording device-- The MD is completely re-recordable. If I don't like something, I can erase it. I can create track divisions to longer songs or dialogues so that I can scan through a disc quickly. I can title songs and discs, I can erase parts of songs if I would like to, and I don't have to carry around a bulky piece of equipment. This unit is the size of a walkman, but you can record and play from it, hook the output to your stereo system and play what you have recorded over your speakers.

You can record from any audio source. --The unit comes with a mini plug (headphone jack size) to digital connecting cable. Most new CD players have a digital output. However, you will probably need to go to a Radio Shack and buy a mini to RCA (aka phono jack) cable (it costs about 3 dollars) so that you can record from most home stereo components (cd players, turntables, tape decks...). I have been making wonderful sounding recordings from every audio source I can (from my CD player using both the digital and analog connectors, tape deck, turntable, the sound out port on my computer, and a mic).

The quality is fantastic. I can not notice any audible differences between CDs and MDs. ALSO...if you are making live recordings of music or interviews, you can use a cheap omnidirectional mic that comes with most computers to make incredible sounding monoaural live recordings that are supreme to any cassette live recording.

The price of MDs are inexpensive. Amazon has a 20 pack of blank MDs for 30 dollars, and that's pretty cheap, about the price of a blank CD (recordable only once). I am using my MD recorder to transfer records and tapes onto MDs for college. Its wonderful because I know that the quality won't deteriorate (as in a cassette tape with heavy usage), and I get the benefits of tracks and titles. The current price of this unit is 200 dollars and that is a fantastic price for an amazing piece of equipment (it retails for up to 100 dollars more...).

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17 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The Swiss Army knife of MD players, only uglier, October 15, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Sony MZ-R37 Portable Minidisc Player/Recorder (Electronics)
I bought this unit because it was on sale, but I would recommend that anyone considering this unit take a look at what Sharp has to offer. For a little more money you can get a larger display (my MZ-R37's display is puny and hard to read at most angles - and it can only display 5 letters at a time), a text display on the remote control and, most importantly, both displays are back-lighted (if there was one option I would want to add to my MZ-R37, it would be this).

Screen caveats aside, the unit is small enough to fit into the pocket of my jeans and I can hook it up to my Sony Discman through the optical line and walk away - in most cases it will note a new track on the CD and start a new track on the MD. Naming the tracks is sheer agony, the average song taking two minutes to title, but my friend who owns the Sharp model reports that it is even harder on his player. The remote control is well laid out, but the buttons on the control and the MD player itself are too small (my hands are on the large side, so maybe it's just me).

In summary: this player is awesome in terms of technology, but its aesthetics (display and buttons) need some working on. If you can stand this and can find this model for significantly less than a Sharp model, then go with it. This player should be for those on a limited budget only.

Battery life is decent for a MD player. I usually have to hook up the player to the AC adapter overnight every night to keep the rechargeable batteries from dying.

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Highest recommendation, July 12, 2006
By 
IronMan Mike Curtis "-Mike" (North Hollywood, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Sony MZ-R37 Portable Minidisc Player/Recorder (Electronics)
I've had my MZ-R37 for several years. I'm a professional musician, working solo (vocals, electric harmonica, guitar, organ bass pedals) or with other musicians. I use the MD to record my/our live performances. I originally had rather low expectations. I just wanted to review the music. Generally I used the output of the sound reinforcement system (tho I made a lot of very good recordings with the included stereo mic). The quality is excellent. I've been able to use many tunes recorded on the MD for CD's. Yes it's THAT good.

I'm not claiming this will replace a full blown Pro Tools studio with Neumann U87's and a staff of Hollywood recording engineers, producers, and such. One can truly do magic with top line gear and a highly skilled production staff in much less time. But many of the MZ-R37's recordings were good enough to be on a CD with these and not embarrass me in comparison. And that's saying a LOT for a dirt cheap pocket size recorder with 1/8th inch input/output jacks.

Mike Curtis
ironmancurtis.com
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent item, December 12, 2001
By 
J. Rossi (Downers Grove, IL) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Sony MZ-R37 Portable Minidisc Player/Recorder (Electronics)
I got this model MD as a present last Christmas and I love it for many reasons: 1.) It is sturdy yet compact. The newer models I have seen don't seem as durable as this model. 2.) I can make my own "mix tapes" thousands of times over because MD's are re-recordable without losing audio quality. Also I can take my favorite songs from CDs and put them on one disc instead of lugging around several CDs. 3.) I can record from any audio source. Download from the internet and make your own MD without investing in blank CDs. 4.) The batteries last forever, or seemingly forever. I listen on long road trips (8 hours +) and seldom need lots of extra batteries. 5.) It's so easy to use that I am able to use it. 6.) I have never had any problems with it. I have even dropped it on the ground (accidentally) a few times and nothing has been damaged on the inside, or outside 7.) It's less bulky than a portable CD player.

There are a million great reasons to buy an MD player, of which the above are only a few. I dn't understand why more people don't own these.

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16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars bonbagay, November 12, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Sony MZ-R37 Portable Minidisc Player/Recorder (Electronics)
Ideal for making customized redordings, although i think the screen should have been bigger and illuminated. I give the sound quality and the ease of use a 12 on a scale of 10. Overall its a great product and for the price it performs as well as the pricier models.
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