Yearly Archives - 2026

From Master to Mixtape: Part 1

There’s something special about playing and making music, and something even more special about having that music played back on a professionally recorded cassette. For musicians, holding that first “demo tape” in their hands is a dream come true. 

At National Audio Company, the last manufacturer of music-quality cassette tape on earth, we live to make those moments happen. But how does one master tape turn into hundreds of professionally produced cassettes?

It begins when a WAV file arrives via WeTransfer. Artwork follows in a separate upload. An independent band in Brooklyn, or a major label in Los Angeles, is about to see their recording become real, tangible cassettes they can hold, sell, and share with fans.

What happens next? Let’s walk through the journey from digital file to finished cassette at National Audio Company.

a display of 16 cassette tapes

A selection of previous duplication projects

Everything In Order: The Setup

Before any work begins, NAC needs three things: 

  1. Your audio files
  2. Your artwork
  3. Your payment 

It’s a policy learned over decades of custom manufacturing; once we start making your cassettes, they’re yours. We can’t repurpose them for anyone else.

The audio arrives as a digital file, ideally a WAV file or an AIFF file (for Mac users) since both formats preserve the full quality of your recording. We can also work with a reel of tape, a CD, and even vinyl if you’re willing to accept some surface noise.

The artwork comes next, usually JPEGs or Adobe files. Our cassette art templates show you exactly where the margins are, where the fold lines fall, and what your finished J-card or O-card will look like.

Finally, you fill out an Individual Property Release form (IPR), confirming you own the rights to duplicate and distribute this recording. You also provide a track list for sides A and B, and select your options from the order form: 

  • How many copies? 
  • What kind of packaging? 
  • Imprint or paper labels? 
  • Cellophane wrap?

Every choice affects the price, which is why there’s no simple “$2.71 per cassette” answer. Everything at NAC is customized.

Once our Cassette Projects Coordinator Jessica downloads all three forms (audio, artwork, and paperwork) and payment is received, she creates a project folder, assigns it a number, and the real work begins.

The Graphics Team: Making It Look Right

Our team of graphic artists get the artwork files and start refining them for production. They check color balance, make sure fonts are legible, look for spelling errors (a must!), and ensure everything stays within the template boundaries so nothing gets cut off in the final product.

two purple cassette tapes

Color matching the print to the chosen shell colors

NAC uses Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator to prepare and proof art files. We print all files in CMYK (Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and Black) but our graphic artists can match specific Pantone colors using swatch books or match your art to your chosen cassette shell color. Physical proofs of the artwork can also be requested and mailed to you for approval to ensure the final product is exactly how you envision it.

Once the graphics team has optimized your artwork, NAC sends you a PDF showing exactly what your finished product will look like, complete with template lines so you can see where it folds and where it gets cut.

This is your chance to make changes. Catch a typo? Want to adjust a color? No problem. Just send revised artwork and NAC will proof it again. But once you approve that final proof, production moves forward.

Stranger Things cassette tape and vinyl record laying on a table

Matching the cassette prints to the vinyl packaging

For larger orders, especially from major labels, NAC also offers test tapes for $5 or test pressings for vinyl at $75. You get a physical sample with the actual audio before the full run begins, so there are no surprises when your order arrives.

The Mastering Magic: Remastering for Analog

While the graphics team works on the visuals, NAC’s three mastering engineers are working on the audio. Most projects take about 45 to 60 minutes to complete, though some complex projects take a lot longer.

Head of Audio Mastering Alex Crisman explains the challenge: “It’s such a thin piece of tape, getting it on there without any distortion or saturation is tricky.” If you played a digital file straight from a CD onto cassette tape, it would be so distorted it would sound terrible. The mastering process bridges that gap.

Our engineers load your WAV file into Adobe Audition and other specialized programs. What they’re really doing is remastering your digital file specifically for analog cassette recording. Digital and analog are fundamentally different formats, and each cassette requires careful optimization.

The process is both visual and auditory. “Most of it is audio, but the visual is helpful,” Alex explains. “You can see what it’s doing, but you have to hear it.” The software displays a graphical representation of the sound waves, making it easier to spot frequencies that might cause problems. But the engineers’ ears are the final judge.

a computer monitor with soundwaves

The audio mastering process

Here’s what happens: Digital files can only have one data bit per recording interval, usually measured every five milliseconds. That means digital recordings can’t truly capture harmonics the way analog tape can. Tape records everything happening in that moment simultaneously. Digital takes snapshots.

NAC’s mastering engineers create a master by analyzing your audio and using processes within the DAW to bring it in line with in-house reference levels. Then, it’s loaded into the digital bin.

The engineers filter out frequencies that cassette tape can’t reproduce well. Anything over 17,000 Hz gets removed – most cassette decks can’t play it back anyway, and human hearing tops out around 20,000 Hz. Anything below 40 Hz gets filtered out as well, with a gentle slope starting around that threshold.

They also add an inaudible cue tone, around 3 Hz at minus 20 decibels, at the end of each recording. This low, quiet tone tells NAC’s duplication machines exactly where an album starts and ends, and tells the loading machines where to cut and splice the tape into a cassette shell.

Denon and Revox audio equipment

The goal throughout this process? “We don’t want anybody to know that we’ve done anything,” Alex says. “Any filtering or compression we’ve done really shouldn’t be too audible.” The art is making it sound natural while optimizing it for the cassette format.

Some projects are straightforward, a rock band might just need the levels adjusted and frequencies filtered. But noise music projects, with their extreme dynamics and frequencies, can require more extensive work. “Sometimes you kind of have to finesse it, because there’s no way this stuff will go on there,” Alex explains. “You have to be a little more creative.”

Whether it’s a major label or an independent artist, the process is identical. “We treat everybody the same,” Alex says. “Every project’s treated the same.”

The result is the digital bin master, a specialized file optimized for analog cassette duplication. This master is burned onto a data disc and also saved on NAC’s server.

Tens of thousands of cassette master discs line the shelves of the production floor

Tens of thousands of cassette master discs line the shelves of the production floor

That data disc? It goes into NAC’s archive, which currently houses more than 80,000 titles. When a customer needs more copies made, whether it’s six months later or six years later, NAC pulls that master and runs it again. The sound will be identical every time.

Stay tuned for Part 2 of “From Master to Mixtape”!

 

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One of A Kind: What Makes National Audio Company Irreplaceable

One Fact That Changes Everything

National Audio Company is the last manufacturer of music-quality recording tape for cassettes on earth. Not just in America. The entire world.

With 57 years of refinement and reinvention under our belts, we practice our craft in Springfield, Missouri—right in the heart of the American Midwest. And from here, we support analog music fans across the planet.

Committed to Cassettes

Who still makes cassette tape? National Audio Company. 

While others chased trends, NAC doubled down on cassettes. In total, we’ve spent 57 years serving the industry, with the past 10 focused on manufacturing recording tape for cassettes. During that time, we’ve gathered a team of experts and engineers whose knowledge is unsurpassed. 

“Staying wasn’t just loyalty,” explained NAC President Steve Stepp. “It was expertise compounding over decades.”

To understand National Audio Company’s importance to the music industry, we have to go back to our founding. When we started in 1969, we worked with radio stations and recording studios, taking care of their reel-to-reel tape needs. 

In 1980, we began loading cassettes with Ampex tape here at our Springfield, Missouri plant. For the next few decades, we carved out a niche serving the audio needs of a variety of businesses, including:

  • Books on Tape for libraries and schools
  • National Library Service (Division of the Library of Congress)
  • Audiobooks and magazines for the blind and visually handicapped
  • Blank tapes for court recorders
Choice Magazine digital cartridges with braille stacked in a tray

Choice Magazine digital cartridges with braille for the visually impaired

In the early 2010s, artists were intentionally keeping tape alive when and where they could. When Pearl Jam released “Vs.” and “Vitalogy” together in 2011, the 20th anniversary box set included a special cassette featuring their legendary January 8, 1995 Self-Pollution Radio broadcast. [Source]

In 2012, Smashing Pumpkins re-released “Pisces Escariot” in an expanded edition with all sorts of goodies for hardcore fans…including a cassette tape. [Source]

Pearl Jam's “Vs.” and “Vitalogy” 20th anniversary box set spread out

Pearl Jam’s “Vs.” and “Vitalogy” 20th anniversary box set

In both cases, sourcing the cassettes was a bit of a challenge for their labels. At the time, there just weren’t many places to get high-quality cassettes made. National Audio stepped in to fill the gap, helping set the stage for a cassette renaissance. At the same time, we became a key resource for independent musicians who wanted an affordable option to get their music out there.

As demand for high-quality cassettes increased, our production expanded to keep pace. By the mid-2010s, we had begun the process of formulating and manufacturing our own recording tape in-house. 

This was a critical juncture for NAC. “It was 20 years ago that the major players decided to get out of analog music with their eyes on the digital future,” Steve explained. But where others jumped ship, National Audio stayed the course. “We doubled down on analog and started manufacturing our own tape in 2016, and it wasn’t long before the biggest names in the business came to us to make their cassettes.”

Trusted with the Irreplaceable

Today, most major record labels entrust NAC with their master recordings. These unique recordings are then turned into “duplication masters” by National Audio. 

What is a duplication master? When a musician records an album in-studio with a record label we work with, they send us the original recording. From this, NAC creates a duplication master—the master recording from which all authorized copies are made. 

It is the physical manifestation of the artist’s work, as recorded in-studio on cutting-edge equipment. And once NAC gets it, we optimize it for the analog format. Each duplication master is securely stored in NAC’s archive, which currently houses more than 80,000 titles!

NAC’s archive is a treasure trove of music. We’re proud to safeguard master recordings from Pearl Jam, Smashing Pumpkins, and many more. 

These are not just recordings; they are irreplaceable pieces of music history.

Guardians of the Galaxy, Awesome Mix Vol. 1 cassette and box

Guardians of the Galaxy, Awesome Mix Vol. 1. Photo by Yucel Moran

When the biggest names in the industry call, NAC answers. As President Steve Stepp likes to say, “If it’s important enough for you to call, it’s important enough for us to answer.” It’s that kind of personal service that’s kept NAC flourishing.

One Roof, Many Formats

As one of the last cassette tape manufacturers of music-quality recording tape, we’re committed to cassettes. We specialize in cassette tape manufacturing and cassette tape duplication

But our technical expertise and appreciation for music mean we also enjoy producing top-quality audio in other formats, from vinyl record pressing to CD duplication.

NAC offers one-stop music production for big music labels and independent artists alike. Our comprehensive capability has several benefits: 

  • Top-quality audio on many formats
  • Simpler process for customers
  • Made in America for better communication and supply chain control

We also offer audio engineering and analog-to-digital transfer services. National Audio can transfer open-reel tapes of all speeds and tape widths, audio cassettes, vinyl, and most other common audio formats. We can help recover valuable audio recordings from open-reel tapes, even ones that have become “sticky” with age.

The production floor at NAC

Part of the production floor at NAC

National Audio Company has been entrusted by governmental, commercial, and institutional clients to transfer thousands of irreplaceable analog recordings. We can also transfer special media to digital formats:

  • Radio programs
  • Music and instructional libraries
  • Old master recordings 

For cassettes and more, contact us today to hear how we can help.

Quiet Confidence

National Audio Company doesn’t need to turn it up to 11. The facts speak loudly and clearly: 

  • 57 years in business 
  • The trust of major labels worldwide
  • The last manufacturer of music-quality cassette tape in the U.S.

We’re not just preserving a format; we’re preserving an art form. And we’re just getting started.

Stay tuned—you’ll be hearing more from NAC.

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Who Is National Audio Company?

We’re National Audio Company, and we’ve been devoted to true sound reproduction since 1969. Known as “The Great American Cassette Company”, we’re the only music-quality cassette tape manufacturer in the world.

In an era dominated by streaming and digital downloads, how does NAC not only survive, but thrive? The answer lies in our commitment to professional-grade audio fidelity, music preservation, and expert knowledge of what makes magnetic tape recording special.

two men standing next to a tape duplication machine

NAC President Steve Stepp (right) and Vice President Phil Stepp (left)

Our Journey from Distribution to Manufacturing Excellence

Our story began over five decades ago in Springfield, Missouri, where we started as a distributor of professional recording equipment. For 12 years, we built our reputation distributing Ampex recording tapes and Fidelipac broadcast cartridges to radio stations, studios, and audio professionals across the country. We learned the business inside and out, understanding what audiophiles, broadcasters, and musicians needed from their magnetic media.

In 1980, we took a pivotal step: we began manufacturing audio cassettes using Ampex tape. This wasn’t just a business decision; it was a commitment to quality control and innovation. We wanted to produce blank cassette tapes that met the exacting standards we’d come to appreciate through years of working with professional audio equipment.

By the late 1980s, our “Audio Pro” cassettes had become the industry standard for cassette duplication. The secret? Precision manufacturing, carefully formulated tape coatings, and quality control protocols that ensured consistent frequency response and signal-to-noise ratios across every single cassette we produced.

Growing When Others Were Shrinking

As demand for our professional-quality cassettes grew, we expanded twice—relocating to a 28,000-square-foot facility in 1989, then moving to our current 135,000-square-foot factory in 1998. While our competitors were eyeing the CD revolution, we were doubling down on cassette manufacturing excellence.

a red building with "National Audio Company" on the side

NAC’s 135,000-square-foot factory in downtown Springfield, MO

The early 2000s brought massive industry shifts and major cassette duplicators pivoted entirely to CD production. We saw something different. We recognized that cassettes still served vital roles in educational materials, religious programming, audiobooks, and increasingly, among music enthusiasts who appreciated analog sound quality. 

Rather than abandon the format, we expanded our cassette duplication services. As competitors chose other avenues, we acquired their equipment, restored and upgraded it, mastered its use, and retrofitted an entire floor of our historic building to produce top-quality magnetic tape. 

Today, National Audio Company offers three types of tape purpose-built for different recording needs:

  • FerroMaster C256™ – the classic ferric cassette tape you know and love. It is refined for use in consumer cassette decks for high-quality recording and playback. 
  • FerroMaster C456™ – the highest quality ferric cassette tape available in the world today. This product has been tested in high-speed duplication equipment and delivers outstanding quality. 
  • FerroMaster C756™ – This Cobalt oxide Type II High Bias tape is made for the most demanding recording applications and is the gold standard in Type II performance. 

We are also refining and enhancing our Magne-Sheen tape coating and finishing process. This will allow smoother contact with recording and playback heads, along with superior audio performance. 

Learn more about NAC’s cassette manufacturing capabilities 

The Science of Superior Sound

What makes a music-quality cassette tape superior? It comes down to physics and chemistry working in perfect harmony.

Our Type I ferric oxide formulation delivers excellent high-frequency response while maintaining low noise floor characteristics essential for music reproduction. The tape coating must be applied uniformly to within microns of tolerance—inconsistencies create audible artifacts called dropouts and alter frequency response curves. We’ve refined our coating process to achieve remarkable consistency.

The cassette shell itself matters tremendously. Poor shell design creates mechanical friction, uneven tape tension, and wow-and-flutter variations that degrade audio quality. Our cassette shells are precision-molded with tight tolerances, ensuring smooth tape transport and optimal head contact throughout the entire playback duration.

cassette tapes on a conveyor belt

“Stranger Things Vol. 1” in production

We also understand cassette tape longevity. Properly manufactured and stored cassettes can preserve audio fidelity for decades because magnetic tape is inherently stable. Unlike optical media that can delaminate or digital files dependent on functioning storage devices, quality cassette tape is remarkably archival.

Global Reach Through Strategic Partnerships

We’re proud to be America’s cassette manufacturer…and now, our reach extends globally. Thanks to our recent partnership with Revox, the renowned German audio equipment manufacturer, we’ve connected with international markets that value precision engineering and analog audio quality. 

a cassette tape

This relationship reflects shared values: 

  • Meticulous craftsmanship 
  • Technical excellence
  • Respect for analog audio’s unique characteristics

Revox’s legendary reputation for high-fidelity audio equipment complements our cassette manufacturing expertise perfectly. Together, we serve audiophiles, archivists, musicians, and audio professionals worldwide who demand exceptional quality.

Beyond Cassettes: Complete Audio Solutions

Our commitment to music quality and preservation means we’re not just a blank cassette tape factory. We offer comprehensive services including:

Whether you’re a musician releasing an album, an organization preserving spoken word archives, or a publisher producing audiobooks, we provide end-to-end solutions from layout and design through duplication, printing, assembly, and shrink wrapping.

We’ve also produced custom private-label cassettes brands, demonstrating our flexibility and manufacturing expertise at scale.

The Analog Renaissance

Today, we’re experiencing something remarkable: musicians and music fans are rediscovering cassettes. For Gen X, it’s the memory of making (or getting) that first mixtape. For Millennials and Gen Z, it’s discovering what their parents knew—that cassettes offer something streaming can’t. 

a cassette tape with a label on it

“Guardians of the Galaxy, Awesome Mix Vol. 1”, photo by Xingye Jiang

They’re drawn to the warmth of analog sound, the tactile experience of holding real music in your hands. It’s about audio character, about the subtle tape saturation that adds richness to recordings, about the ritual of physical media. If that sounds right to you, you need to know about us.

Like cassettes themselves, National Audio Company is here for the long haul and our tape is still rolling!

Stay tuned—you’ll be hearing more from NAC.

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