Experts Find Oldest Voice Recording, From 1860
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23835160/?GT1=43001
Quote:
WASHINGTON - U.S. audio historians have discovered and played back a French inventor's historic 1860 recording of a folk song  the oldest-known audio recording  made 17 years before Thomas Edison invented the phonograph.
"It's magic," audio historian David Giovannoni said on Thursday. "It's like a ghost singing to you."
Here's the recording:
http://www.firstsounds.org/sounds/1860-Scott-Au-Clair-de-la-Lune.mp3
Re: Experts Find Oldest Voice Recording, From 1860
The EQ is all off... way too much treble. They need to buy a new condenser mic for recordings like this. Whoever produced this recording should be ashamed of himself.
Re: Experts Find Oldest Voice Recording, From 1860
Sound quality is pretty bad...wouldn't even have known that was a song if not for the description.
What do you expect though for 1860?
Re: Experts Find Oldest Voice Recording, From 1860
"BloodyHorns82" wrote:
Quote:
Sound quality is pretty bad...wouldn't even have known that was a song if not for the description.
What do you expect though for 1860?
Maybe I have high standards...
http://www.omguide.com/images/kiss/Kiss2003.jpg
Re: Experts Find Oldest Voice Recording, From 1860
Pretty dang cool
Cant really understand but thats a LONGGGGGGGG time ago
Re: Experts Find Oldest Voice Recording, From 1860
That is quite the recording, don't think Edison should be worried though.
Re: Experts Find Oldest Voice Recording, From 1860
"Prophet" wrote:
Quote:
That is quite the recording, don't think Edison should be worried though.
Such bullshit.
It's not porn, so it couldn't have been the first.
=Z=
Re: Experts Find Oldest Voice Recording, From 1860
sounds like the poltergeist lady
Re: Experts Find Oldest Voice Recording, From 1860
Quote:
Giovannoni said he learned on March 1 of its existence in an archive in Paris and traveled to the French capital a week later. Experts working with the First Sounds group then transformed the paper tracings into sound.
See, this is a recording from sounds produced in 1860, but never played back until 2008.
Edison was recording and playing back sound in 1877.
I read further in the article and see this quote, which explains what I just said more clearly.
Quote:
"But actually the truth is he was the first person to have recorded (sound) and played it back. There were several people working along the lines of Scott, including Alexander Graham Bell, in experimenting  trying to write the visual representation of sound before Edison invented the idea of playing it back," Giovannoni said.