Earliest known sound recordings

Discussion in 'TV, Music and Movies' started by Jaydog57, Jun 2, 2009.

  1. Jaydog57

    Jaydog57 Canes/Fins/Magic fan

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    'Researchers unveil imprints made 20 years before Edison invented phonograph.'

    'A bunch of wavy lines scratched by a stylus onto fragile paper that had been blackened by the soot from an oil lamp date from 1857. That’s 20 years before Edison invented the phonograph.'

    'Parisian inventor Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville never intended for the soot-lined imprint of the sound waves to be played back, the historians reported. But the inventor hoped the visual patterns of the sound waves he had recorded using a hornlike device with the stylus attached resembling an artificial ear — called a phonautograph — might one day be read like sheet music to recreate a singer’s voice or the timbre of a musical instrument.'

    Link - http://www.usnews.com/articles/science/2009/06/01/earliest-known-sound-recordings-revealed.html

    There are mp3's of the recordings in the link. Just thought you music guys might find it interesting.
     

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