Texarkana Gazette

Lou Ottens, who invented the cassette tape, dies at 94

- By Harrison Smith

Lou Ottens was fiddling with a reel-to-reel tape recorder one night in the early 1960s, trying to thread a wafer-thin piece of magnetic tape through mechanical guides so that he could listen to … something. He would later recall that he was probably trying to play a work of classical music, though he couldn’t be sure.

What he did remember was the hours he spent futzing with the machine before arriving at work the next morning with an idea. Ottens, the head of product developmen­t at Philips’s electronic­s factory in Hasselt, Belgium, told his team they needed to develop an audio device that was smaller, cheaper and easier to use than the reel-to-reel tape recorder.

As a result, they invented the cassette tape, a compact, plastic-encased sound machine that helped democratiz­e music, making it easier for millions of people to hear, record and share songs.

“The legend that came from this, which of course is not very flattering for Lou, is that the cassette was born from the clumsiness of a very clever man,” his Philips colleague Willy Leenders later said, in an interview for the 2016 documentar­y “Cassette.”

Ottens, who died March 6 at 94, unleashed a sonic revolution with the Compact Cassette, which Philips unveiled at a Berlin radio exhibition in 1963. Billions of cassettes were sold before he spearheade­d another advance in electronic­s, working on a Philips team that jointly introduced the compact disc with Sony in 1982. One of his daughters, Arine Ottens, said he died at an elder care center in Duizel, the Netherland­s, but did not give a cause.

With blank cassettes, listeners could record their favorite songs from the radio or from vinyl records, creating the first mix tapes — on literal magnetic tape — decades before digital playlists were shared on streaming services such as Spotify.

The tapes also were used to record telephone messages, books, early hip-hop songs and moments of artistic inspiratio­n, as when Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards drowsily hit “record” on his Philips cassette player one night and woke up to hear “Satisfacti­on,” along with “40 minutes of me snoring.”

Ottens’s cassette tape was about half the width of RCA’s tape cartridge, which had been released in 1958, and ran at half speed, requiring less tape and further cutting down on size. To perfect the tape player’s dimensions, he made a wood block that could fit in the side pocket of his tweed jacket, explaining that he wanted the cassette player to be not just portable, but “pocketable.”

Lodewijk Frederik Ottens was born in Bellingwol­de, the Netherland­s, on June 21, 1926. Both parents were schoolteac­hers, and his father later directed the regional employment office in Hilversum, where Ottens grew up.

As a child, he passed the time playing with a Meccano model constructi­on set. He progressed to more advanced tinkering as a teenager during World War II, building a radio during the German occupation that enabled his family to tune in to Radio Oranje, a London broadcaste­r that delivered speeches from exiled political leaders such as Queen Wilhelmina.

Ottens later served in the Dutch air force, although he was stationed on the ground because of poor eyesight. He studied at what is now the Delft University of Technology, supporting himself by working half-days as a draftsman at an X-ray equipment factory, and joined Philips after graduating with a mechanical engineerin­g degree in 1952.

Two decades later, he was named technical director of Philips’s audio division. A research team at the company’s NatLab research facility in Eindhoven was working on an optical disc project when Ottens asked them to begin developing “an audio-only version of the disc,” according to Robert Barry’s history book “Compact Disc.” “By all accounts, they were not especially keen.”

As he had with the cassette tape, Ottens insisted that his team make the disc smaller and smaller.,The end result ultimately measured 4.75 inches across, although Ottens would have preferred it half a centimeter smaller.

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