Stephen's profileTLPS-BOOTLEPhotosBlogListsMore ![]() | Help |
|
10/30/2007 Footsteps of AngelsFOOTSTEPS OF ANGELS By Henry Wadsworth Longfellow When the hours of Day are numbered, Ere the evening lamps are lighted, Then the forms of the departed He, the young and strong, who cherished They, the holy ones and weakly, And with them the Being Beauteous, With a slow and noiseless footstep And she sits and gazes at me Uttered not, yet comprehended, Oh, though oft depressed and lonely,
Footsteps of Angels is a poem from the works of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
First ever sound recording Earliest human voice recording uncovered
Posted at: 5:02am 28th March 2008 by Ben Hardwidge
Recording of ‘Au clair de la lune’ dates from 1860,
predating Edison’s phonograph by 17 years
Researchers have uncovered the earliest known recordings
of the human voice, and uploaded MP3 files of the
recordings to the Web.
Back in 1860, when Queen Victoria was only 41 and the
Crystal Palace was only nine years old, French inventor
Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville was experimenting with
a new recording device he called the ‘phonautograph’.
This quirky machine basically scratched sound waves onto
a sheet of paper, which had been previously blackened by
smoke from an oil lamp.
A number of phonautograph recordings have now been
successfully played and recorded by researchers at First
Sounds, which is a group of various people from
scientists to recording engineers who are committed to
making the earliest sound recordings available to
everyone. The recordings available include a recording
of the Manhattan Metropolitan railway from 1859, as well
as somebody singing the French song ‘Au Clair de la
Lune’ in 1860.
The recordings predate Edison’s famous phonograph
invention by 17 years, but Scott apparently envisioned
no way of being able to playback the recordings; they
were just intended to be visual recordings of the sound
wave. Scans were taken of the original images, and
converted into sound by scientists at the Lawrence
Berkeley National Laboratory who have developed a way of
applying ‘non-contact digital imaging to any material
containing a recorded “groove,”’ meaning that the
original recording is not harmed in the process.
If you want to listen to this recording it is avaliable to download from my muzic files folder. |
|
|