home
piano music
piano forum
chat
music dictionary
about
sign-up
login
search
composers a-k
composers l-z
complete list
free piano sheet music
recordings
latest additions
about us
news
faq
forum rules
links
mobile
contact
September 05, 2008, 10:00:52 AM
Welcome,
Guest
. Please
login
or
register
.
Forum Home
Help
Search
Piano Forum
>
Piano Board
>
Miscellaneous
>
First recording ever? From France.
Pages: [
1
]
Go Down
Print
Author
Topic: First recording ever? From France. (Read 120 times)
Bob
PS Gold Member
Sr. Member
Offline
Posts: 4704
First recording ever? From France.
«
on:
March 28, 2008, 05:28:08 PM »
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080328/ap_on_en_mu/earliest_recording_14
French recording may be world's first By JASON DEAREN, Associated Press Writer
Fri Mar 28, 8:32 AM ET
SAN FRANCISCO - At first listen, the grainy high-pitched warble doesn't sound like much, but scientists say the French recording from 1860 is the oldest known recorded human voice.
The 10-second clip of a woman singing "Au Clair de la Lune," taken from a so-called phonautogram, was recently discovered by audio historian David Giovannoni. The recording predates Thomas Edison's "Mary had a little lamb" — previously credited as the oldest recorded voice — by 17 years.
The tune was captured using a phonautograph, a device created by Parisian inventor Edouard-Leon Scott de Martinville that created visual recordings of sound waves.
Using a needle that moved in response to sound, the phonautograph etched sound waves into paper coated with soot from an oil lamp.
Giovannoni and his research partner, Patrick Feaster, began looking for phonautograms last year and in December discovered two of Scott's — from 1857 and 1859 — in France's patent office. Using high-resolution optical scanning equipment, Giovannoni collected images of the phonautograms that he brought back to the United States.
"What Scott was trying to do in 1861 was establish that he was the first to arrive at this idea," Giovannoni said. "He was depositing with the French Academy examples of his work."
"We took those images back to Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and found that (Scott's) technique wasn't very developed," Giovannoni said. "There were squiggles on paper, but it was not recording sound."
So Giovannoni, who collaborates with many other audio historians, including scientists at Berkeley, asked the French Academy of Sciences to send digital scans of more of Scott's papers. Those scans arrived on March 1.
"When I opened up the file, I nearly fell off my chair," Giovannoni said. "We had beautifully recorded and preserved phonautograms, many of which had dates on them."
While Giovannoni was excited by the images, they still needed to be translated into sound.
Creating sound from lines scrawled on sooty paper was a job for Berkeley lab scientists Carl Haber and Earl Cornell. Haber and Cornell had previously created sound from phonautograms that Edison had created in 1878 of trains.
The scientists used optical imaging and a "virtual stylus" to read Scott's sooty paper. They immediately got sound, but because phonautograph was hand-cranked its speed varied and that changed the recording's pitch.
"If someone's singing at middle C and the crank speeds up and slows down, the waves change shape and are shifting," said Cornell. "We had a tuning fork side by side with the recording, so you can correct the sound and speed variations."
On March 3, Haber and Cornell sent audio back to Giovannoni, and another engineer further fine-tuned the recording to bring the voice out more from the static.
"When I first heard the recording as you hear it ... it was magical, so ethereal," said Giovannoni. "The fact is it's recorded in smoke. The voice is coming out from behind this screen of aural smoke."
Scott never intended for anyone to listen to his phonautograms, but the result of this work will be played in public on Friday at the annual conference of the Association for Recorded Sound Collections at Stanford University.
___
On the Net:
Audio of the "Au Clair de la Lune" recording:
http://www.firstsounds.org/sounds/
Logged
Vote Stephen Colbert for President! Support Wrist Awareness and vote Colbert! (even if you aren't old enough to vote or aren't a U.S. citizen:p )
Petter
PS Gold Member
Sr. Member
Online
Posts: 552
Re: First recording ever? From France.
«
Reply #1 on:
April 04, 2008, 01:26:05 PM »
freaky
Logged
a 1 2 3 a 4
Bob
PS Gold Member
Sr. Member
Offline
Posts: 4704
Re: First recording ever? From France.
«
Reply #2 on:
April 04, 2008, 05:45:33 PM »
That's what I thought. A ghost voice from the past.
I would say that's 'present tense' too. A very live sound. It's just freaky to know that that's from Civil War times. That long ago. There's something more alive about sound that any other artificats just don't get across.
Logged
Vote Stephen Colbert for President! Support Wrist Awareness and vote Colbert! (even if you aren't old enough to vote or aren't a U.S. citizen:p )
Essyne
PS Silver Member
Sr. Member
Offline
Posts: 821
Re: First recording ever? From France.
«
Reply #3 on:
April 05, 2008, 01:10:10 AM »
I don't know why this affected me so much.
I have to admit, it brought tears to my eyes. I'm in no ways your extremely emotional teenager, and the fact that it practically made me cry is bizarre, esp. because it's just an old, extremely weathered recording. "Freaky" is right. How incredible. Absolutely amazing. Can't even be explained.
Logged
"A bird does not sing because it has an answer. It sings because it has a song."
- Chinese Proverb -
Pages: [
1
]
Go Up
Print
Jump to:
Please select a destination:
-----------------------------
Piano Board
-----------------------------
=> Performance
=> Repertoire
=> Teaching
=> Student's Corner
=> Instruments
=> Miscellaneous
=> Audition Room
===> Sheet Music Requests
===> Teaching Resources
===> Music Theory
===> Polls etc.
-----------------------------
Non Piano Board
-----------------------------
=> Anything but piano
=> The PF website
Most popular classical piano composers:
Bach
-
Beethoven
-
Brahms
-
Chopin
-
Debussy
-
Grieg
-
Haydn
-
Mendelssohn
Mozart
-
Liszt
-
Rachmaninoff
-
Ravel
-
Schubert
-
Schumann
-
Scriabin
-
Tchaikowsky
Piano Street Sheet Music Library, complete list:
Albéniz - Beethoven
|
Beyer - Burgmüller
|
Chopin - Couperin
|
Couppey - Grieg
|
Gurlitt -Liszt
|
Löhlein - Mendelssohn
|
Mozart - Rachmaninoff
|
Rameau - Scarlatti
|
Schoenberg - Schumann
|
Schytte - Scriabin
|
Smetana -Türk
|
Verdi - Wieck Schumann
Loading...
o