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July 25, 2008 10:20:49 PM CDT



Earliest Recording of Sound Finally Played Back

Posted Mar 27, 08 11:29 AM CDT in Technology Science & Health 

(Newser) – Thomas Edison and associates might've been first to hear recorded sound, but scientists have revealed they weren’t the first to create it, the New York Times reports. A 10-second recording of “Au Clair de la Lune” made in 1860—17 years before Edison patented the phonograph—has finally been played back by researchers who discovered it in a Paris archive.

The Frenchman who created the phonautograph—a horn affixed to a stylus, which drew sound waves on paper before playback was even imagined—always maintained he’d beaten the American to the punch. The typesetter responsible for what's now deemed “the earliest known recording of sound,” saw recording as a stenographic pursuit, and likely figured the less-essential hearing part would come in time.

Source New York Times

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Photograph of Edison with his phonograph, in 1877.   (Public Domain)
One of Edison's cylinder phonographs from 1899.   (Wikimedia Commons)
Scientists have figured out how to play back a snippet of sound recorded by a Frenchman in 1860 -- 17 years before Edison patented the phonograph and 28 before the previous earliest known recording.   ((c) Brymo)
« Prev« Prev | Next »Next » Slideshow
Edison Phonograph   (penrhosgarnedd (YouTube))
Thomas Alva Edison's Speech, 1927   (transformingArt (YouTube))

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