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Centuries of Sound
Добавлен 4 мар 2017
Видео
Malinke Musicans, Mali - War Song, Harp with Drums (1934)
Просмотров 465 месяцев назад
From a collection collection of field recordings made by ethnomusicologist Laura C. Boulton, originally issued in 1957 on Folkways Records.
Relaxed Muscle - Branded
Просмотров 889 месяцев назад
From The Heavy EP, 2003. Bizarrely left off the LP.
Mfktz - So Long, London
Просмотров 2911 месяцев назад
A soundscape of London through three centuries, not related to the as yet (24th February 2024) unreleased Taylor Swift song of the same name.
The Priory 13/06/2000 - with Michael Greco, Anna Friel & Moloko
Просмотров 810Год назад
Mediocre episode of this frankly crap show which I taped off the telly because I was in the audience that day. However after it was the day after England's defeat to Portugal in Euro 2000 and I turned up waving a Portugal flag, they seem to have avoided showing me on camera at all. Still a decent enough performance from Moloko at the end.
Centuries of Sound Radiopod Prequel Special #1 - Ancient Sounds, with Simon O’Dwyer of Ancient...
Просмотров 354Год назад
In this first of a series of special editions of the Centuries of Sound Radiopod, I'm joined by Simon O'Dwyer of Ancient Music Ireland to talk about music from a time before we had recordings, or even music notation, and hear some reconstructed prehistoric music from his own collection and others. Simon and Maria's website is at www.ancientmusicireland.com Their new sound library, Paleosonic, i...
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast #22 - 1914
Просмотров 196Год назад
James Errington takes you on another trip into the ancient history of recorded sound, this time joined by Cambridge native Liam Higgins to review the music scene on both sides of the Atlantic in 1914, the year the lights famously went out all over Europe. This episode includes for the first (and hopefully the last) time, your hosts actually singing. Sorry. Get full mixes, early access to the ra...
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast #21 - 1913
Просмотров 64Год назад
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast #21 - 1913
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast #17 - 1909
Просмотров 81Год назад
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast #17 - 1909
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast #16 - 1908
Просмотров 58Год назад
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast #16 - 1908
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast 015 - 1907
Просмотров 83Год назад
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast 015 - 1907
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast 014 - 1906
Просмотров 53Год назад
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast 014 - 1906
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast 013 - 1905
Просмотров 44Год назад
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast 013 - 1905
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast 012 - 1904
Просмотров 189Год назад
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast 012 - 1904
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast 011 - 1903
Просмотров 132Год назад
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast 011 - 1903
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast 010 - 1902
Просмотров 109Год назад
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast 010 - 1902
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast 009 - 1901
Просмотров 72Год назад
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast 009 - 1901
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast 008 - 1900
Просмотров 98Год назад
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast 008 - 1900
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast 007 - 1898 to 1899
Просмотров 68Год назад
Centuries of Sound Radio Podcast 007 - 1898 to 1899
thank you! it's so hard to find the recordings from this cd
great arrived
Incredible!
only 90s kids will remember
Wow, what a fantastic collection of so many artefacts I’ve come across with this hobby of early sound recording and film. And also have never the Gourard toast in such high fidelity. Just wonderful!
hello mx. centuries of sound. i find your mixtapes most pleasing to the ear adn brain. thank you for isolating and uploading this track. peace and blessings
I better keep it safe
1890s 😲
Kinda slaps ngl
1:50 - 2:03 might be the first ever restored version of Jeune Jouvencelle. If it is, then recording is a significant historical advancement And if we can restore that, we could probably restore "the Lord's prayer" from 1859 (all we have to do is remove the noise to get clear vocals)
1:50 - 2:03 Jeune Jouvencelle (restored?) 2:04 - 2:18 Fly, little bee
incrível.... essa música está no jogo Read dead redemption 2 quando vc entra no teatro... rsrs
Además coincide el año de salida de la canción con el año que esta transcurriendo cuando jugamos con arthur , 1899
A BIG THANKYOU FOR THIS !!!!
Thankyou for such great recording of this Famous day . 6 June 1944 ... D-DAY ....LEST WE FORGET....
We are all listening to stuff that happened 150 years ago, and someone dead speaking and singing. Possibly laughing and crying too.
Hello, Hello, Hello, Hello, Hello, Hello, [Verse 1] I've got a little baby, but she's out of sight, I talk to her across the telephone. I've never seen my honey but she's mine all right, So take my tip and leave this gal alone. Every single morning you will hear me yell, "Hey Central! Fix me up along the line." He connects me with ma honey, then I rings the bell, And this is what I say to baby mine, [Chorus:] Hello! ma baby, Hello! Ma honey, Hello! ma ragtime gal. Send me a kiss by wire, baby my heart's on fire! If you refuse me, Honey, you'll lose me, then you'll be left alone; Oh baby, telephone and tell me I'm your own. Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello there. [Verse 2] This morning through the phone she said her name was Bess, And now I kind of know where I am at. I'm satisfied because I've got my babe's address Here pasted in the lining of my hat. I am mighty scared, 'cause if the wires get crossed, 'Twill separate me from ma baby mine, Then some other man will win her, and my game is lost, And so each day I shout along the line, Hello, hello, hello. Hello, hello, hello.
Lyrics?
Hi. You talk about After the Ball as most popular song of 1893, a style soon to be swept away by ragtime. I disagree. As an American, I can hear " Take me out to the ballgame," amongst other popular songs of the early 20th century. Traditions of popular or at least novelty songs which continue to this day. I'm not sure we're always connecting the dots here. Best wishes.
I'm not sure where the connection is between the two, aside from having the word Ball in the title. After The Ball is firmly in the Victorian parlor song tradition, but TMOTTBG is classic Tin Pan Alley, it has a syncopated rhythm and a swerve to the tune. Of course there was plenty of crossover from one era to the next, often it was the same songwriters adopting new styles.
0:01 - 0:17 Edison's "Phonautograms" 0:18 - 1:23 Edison 1888 recording (tinfoil) 1:24 - 1:48 Lambert's talking clock (Track 2, "The talking clock") 1:49 - 2:07 Lambert's talking clock (Track 5, [reversed] "we're bringing your favourite show back") 2:08 -
Sick beats
God i remember this show. For some reason i used to think it was quite cool when i was 14.
This works beautifully well.
Can really hear what he's sayin' can we 😂😂😂😂😂😂
Simpson's theme
Somehow predicted the show Dark by about a decade
thank you for doing this, this feels very meaningful to me 💌 looking forward to having AI help further restore those very old recordings
what are today's tune fork?
That's a good shape (or a great restoration) of such an old musical recording. Probably one of the very first commercial recordings ever
Fascinating! One significant omission, though, was the category of reed instruments. From the earliest reed pipes, to the classical auloi, and the primitive hornpipe, bladder pipe, and bagpipe, there is much to consider and enjoy.
If you know of some good reconstructions, please let me know!
This is probably the first pop culture to telephones, back when there were less than a million of them in use, at least in america.
It's the earliest I'm aware of, there's another song called "Hello Central, Give Me Heaven" from 1901, not a fan of that one though.
@@centuriesofsound There's also a Jolson song from 1917 called "Hello Central Give Me No Man's Land", which is very much based on it.
No, I don't know why tunestotube decided to rotate the image.
This recording is such high quality, I can hear them telephone bells in the background of the recording! If you listen close enough, you can hear the sound effect faintly between the first chorus and second bridge
Thanks, really happy about how this one turned out.
the point of this song is that youre talking to you beloved through a telephone, thats why every chorus they play telephone rings in the background
@@shadbanta14 well, I’m only stating my comment since previous recordings I’ve heard were too low quality to even hear the ringing
Amazing!
The first version of, "Can you hear me now?"
I'm a bit on the fence about that 'restored' Caruso recording, especially the artificial reverb... BTW, one correction: 'The Smiler' was written by Percy Wenrich, not Scott Joplin. Another note: Molinari wasn't 'playing' - he was cranking an actual street barrel piano. You can tell by the elaborate arrangement, which would be nearly impossible for a human pianist; and by the peculiar 'ringing' tone (as barrel pianos usually didn't. have dampers).
The metal used in 'metallic soap' was aluminum hydrate: other ingredients were stearic acid and caustic soda. 'Gamp', btw, is a literary eponym: there was a character in Dickens's _Martin Chuzzlewit_ named Sairy Gamp, who habitually carried a large, bulky umbrella.
44.01: Judging from the orchestral accompaniment, and the Ed Meeker announcement, that version of 'Under the Bamboo Tree' may be a later remake, under the original catalogue number. I have the 1902 version, which has piano accompaniment, and Collins announcing: ruclips.net/video/xbczEp8jUkQ/видео.html
Thanks, there was a lot of guesswork at this point, and difficult to check anything out - think I've learned a bit since then. This record was (I think) from the UCSB archive and given only a range rather than an exact year, but it does sound more like later 1900s to my ears now.
This is a pretty cool podcast here, thanks!
2:56 flying bird
One aspect of the early disc industry might be mentioned: Seaman's break with Berliner. Seaman was apparently discontented with his part in the Gramophone business deal: he tried to offer them a superior, lower-cost player (the 'Montross' Gramophone), only to be rejected. He then apparently. accepted an offer from Columbia, who were trying to capture the new disc market (starting with a crude 'Toy' Graphophone, which played vertical-cut wax discs, and which failed commercially; then backing a couple of other competitors, such as the 'Double-Bell Wonder' and the 'Vitaphone', which also withered on the vine). They got Seaman to admit in court that Berliner had violated certain patents held by Columbia, and hence opened the way to bar Berliner from doing business in the US. Instead of quitting altogether, Berliner moved his operations to Canada, in Montreal. When Johnson finally established Victor on a legal basis, the two began cooperating...
Very good sir
A couple of technical comments: Metal styli were replaced very early on by sapphire, for both recording and playback. Clockwork motors did not become common until the mid-'90s: commercial recordings were usually made on phonographs with battery powered electric motors. When it came to duplicating cylinders, there were two early methods: either connect two phonographs, one with a reproducing head, the other with a recording head, by a rubber tube. The other method was mechanical, by using a pantographic machine. In both cases, as mentioned, there was some loss of sound quality. As for 'charts': it was in early 1890 when the trade paper _The Phonoscope_ (iirc) published a 'List of the Most Requested Phonograms'; and indeed, Johnson's 'Laughing Song' was at no. 1 for several weeks - the very first 'hit' record. The 'McKinley' recording is most likely not by the President himself, but by a studio artist. McKinley is not known to have recorded his voice; and the rigors of multiple recording sessions in those days would have cut seriously into his campaign time.
Thank you - this show is from about five years ago, and I am sure I made several mistakes here, it was still early days for the project. Perhaps one day I will revisit and check everything.
This is a brilliant and AMAZING channel. How this channel does not have millions upon millions of subscribers is beyond me. Thank you for all you do.
Full tracklist: 0:00:00 1944-06-06 0330 CBS D-Day Broadcast 0:00:15 1944-06-06 0332 NBC D-Day Broadcast The Buildup 0:00:33 1944-06-05 BBC European Service With Resistance Messages 0:01:37 1944-06-04 Frank Gillard - Build for D-Day 0:02:20 1944-06-05 FDR Fireside Chat 0:02:33 1944-06-05 Eisenhower’s Pre D-Day Announcement to Troops 0:04:13 1944-06-05 BBC Field Marshall Montgomery Address On Eve Of D-Day The Journey 0:05:08 1944-06-03 BBC Robin Duff On Sealed Ship 0:05:50 1944-06-06 BBC Robin Duff Mid Channel To Normandy 0:06:16 1944-06-08 BBC Allied Troops Prayer Before Invasion 0:06:45 1944-06-08 CAN Travelling With D-Day Convoy 0:07:10 1944-06-06 D-Day Ship Attack The Assault Begins 0:09:21 1944-06-06 BBC Colin Wills Lands With Infantry 0:09:57 1944-06-08 BBC Robin Duff Five Minutes Before H-Hour 0:10:20 1944-06-08 BBC Robin Duff At Signal For Landing 0:10:45 1944-12-31 MBS News 1944 In Review 0:11:22 1944-06-08 BBC British Tank Crew Describes Beach Landing 0:11:48 1944-06-08 BBC UK Soldier Landing Near Coastal Mines 0:12:10 1944-06-08 CAN Recounting The Landing 0:12:41 1944-06-08 CAN The Scene On The Beach (3 Clips) 0:13:32 1944-06-08 CAN US Soldier On The Beach (2 Clips) 0:13:58 1944-06-08 CAN A Handful Of French Sand The First Reports 0:14:45 1944-06-06 0330 CBS D-Day Broadcast 0:14:49 1944-06-06 0300 CBS News Unconfirmed Reports Of Invasion (3 Clips) 0:16:27 1944-06-06 0332 NBC D-Day Broadcast 0:16:45 1944-06-06 0330 CBS D-Day Broadcast (2 Clips) The Paratroopers Land 0:17:26 1944-06-06 BBC Chester Wilmot In Glider 0:18:11 1944-06-06 BBC Chester Wilmot Sees Gliders 0:18:36 1944-06-06 CAN Glider Formations Flying Over The Beaches 0:19:45 1944-06-06 BBC Chester Wilmot Reports From Inside British Glider 0:20:09 1944-06-06 BBC Guy Byam Parachutes Into France 0:20:43 1944-06-06 BBC Alan Melville Sees Paratroops 0:21:03 1944-06-08 BBC The 13th Man To Land In France 0:21:15 1944-12-31 MBS News 1944 In Review The Announcement 0:22:29 1944-06-06 D-Day Announcement - BBC Newsflash 0:23:28 1944-06-06 0332 NBC D-Day Broadcast (3 Clips) 0:25:31 1944-12-31 MBS News 1944 In Review 0:26:59 1944-06-06 0332 NBC D-Day Broadcast 4am to 5am EST 0:27:23 1944-06-06 0415 CBS D-Day Broadcast (4 Clips) 0:28:51 1944-06-06 0400 NBC D-Day Broadcast 0:28:58 1944-06-06 0415 CBS D-Day Broadcast 0:29:45 1944-06-06 0415 NBC D-Day Broadcast 0:30:00 1944-06-06 D-Day Message To Free French Troops 5am to 9am EST 0:30:19 1944-06-06 BBC John Snagge D-Day Has Come 0:30:56 1944-06-06 0500 CBS D-Day Broadcast (11 Clips) 0:34:12 1944-06-06 0540 CBS D-Day Broadcast (4 Clips) 0:36:45 1944-06-06 BBC Eisenhower to Western Europe 0:37:14 1944-06-06 0540 CBS D-Day Broadcast 9am to 12pm EST 0:38:00 1944-06-06 0900 NBC D-Day Broadcast 0:39:10 1944-06-06 0930 NBC D-Day Broadcast 0:39:42 1944-06-06 0900 NBC D-Day Broadcast 0:40:20 1944-06-06 0927 CBS D-Day Broadcast 0:40:34 1944-06-06 0930 NBC D-Day Broadcast 0:41:00 1944-06-06 0900 NBC D-Day Broadcast 0:41:33 1944-06-06 0930 NBC D-Day Broadcast 0:42:16 1944-06-06 0927 CBS D-Day Broadcast 0:43:13 1944-06-08 CAN Reports From The Beachhead 0:43:31 1944-06-06 0927 CBS D-Day Broadcast (2 Clips) 0:44:10 1944-06-06 US D-Day Bulletin On Landing Success 0:44:23 1944-06-06 1015 CBS Light Of The World 12pm to 4:30pm EST 0:45:33 1944-06-06 Eisenhower’s D-Day Broadcast to Western Europe 0:46:16 1944-06-06 1200 CBS Kate Smith Speaks - Prayer For Our Troops 0:46:33 1944-06-06 Crisco News D-Day 0:47:42 1944-06-06 1300 NBC News Reports From London 0:48:01 1944-06-06 1245 CBS D-Day Broadcast (2 Clips) 0:48:36 1944-06-06 1300 NBC News Reports From London 4:30pm to 8pm EST 0:50:04 1944-06-06 1630 0:51:05 1944-06-06 1915 CBS Passing Parade 0:51:35 1944-06-06 1630 0:52:44 1944-06-06 1830 NBCR Fibber McGee and Molly D-Day Broadcast 0:52:57 1944-06-06 1630 NBC D-Day Broadcast 0:53:49 1944-06-06 1830 NBC News Lowell Thomas Reporting 0:54:40 1944-06-06 1800 CBS D-Day Broadcast 0:55:04 1944-06-06 1915 CBS Passing Parade 0:55:34 1944-06-06 1800 CBS D-Day Broadcast 0:56:42 1944-06-06 Cross Country Reaction to D-Day 0:56:58 1944-06-06 1830 NBCR Fibber McGee and Molly D-Day Broadcast 0:57:49 1944-06-06 1915 CBS Passing Parade 0:57:57 1944-06-06 1630 8pm to Midnight EST 0:58:15 1944-06-06 2000 NBC Dr Goldstein And Ginny Simms 0:58:38 1944-06-06 2130 CBS D-Day Broadcast 0:59:00 1944-06-08 CAN Nighttime Convoy Anti-Aircraft Attack 0:59:40 1944-06-06 2000 NBC Dr Goldstein And Ginny Simms 1:00:08 1944-06-06 2210 NBC Fred Waring And His Pennsylvanians 1:01:10 1944-06-06 2130 CBS D-Day Broadcast 1:03:20 1944-06-06 2210 NBC Fred Waring And His Pennsylvanians 1:04:00 1944-06-06 2000 NBC Dr Goldstein And Ginny Simms 1:04:27 1944-06-06 2210 NBC Fred Waring And His Pennsylvanians 1:05:40 1944-06-06 2130 CBS D-Day Broadcast 1:06:28 1944-06-06 2000 NBC Dr Goldstein And Ginny Simms 1:06:53 1944-06-06 2130 CBS D-Day Broadcast (2 Clips) 1:08:15 1944-06-06 NBC Poem and Prayer for Invading Army 1:10:59 1944-06-06 2210 NBC Fred Waring And His Pennsylvanians 1:11:39 1944-06-06 2130 CBS D-Day Broadcast (2 Clips) 1:12:48 1944-06-06 2000 NBC Dr Goldstein And Ginny Simms 1:13:06 1944-06-06 2130 CBS D-Day Broadcast 1:13:42 1944-06-06 2200 NBCR Bob Hope Show 1:14:10 1944-06-06 2210 NBC Fred Waring And His Pennsylvanians The Next Day And Later 1:14:34 1944-06-08 CBS News D-Day Invasion 1:14:53 1944-06-07 NBCB George Hicks From The Deck Of USS Ancon 1:16:04 1944-06-08 CBS News D-Day Invasion 1:16:19 1944-06-07 CBS Kate Smith Speaks 1:16:59 1944-06-08 CBS News D-Day Invasion 1:17:17 1944-06-17 BBC Frank Gillard Takes Cover 1:17:45 1944-06-12 BBC Richard Dimbleby Reports Flying Over Normandy 1:19:33 1944-06-08 CBC Matthew Halton Welcomed By French Civilians 1:20:12 1944-06-08 BBC Michael Standing On French Civilians 1:20:42 1944-06-14 BBC Alan Melville Hermanville - Church Bells
This is incredible!
0:34 childhood classic for me
Something within me remembers this even though it predates my existence on this earth.
Who made this video?
I did, unless you're asking where the clips come from, in which case they come from many different places.
@@centuriesofsound Thank you. It is wonderful. That combination of sounds and moving pictures. I make some music and I thought this video is perfect for what I plan to do. Of course, I must not use your work because of copyright issue, but if the samples used in your video are in the public domain, then it will be ok. So, I would be very grateful if you could tell me where all the videos came from? Regards from Belgrade and I am sorry if my English is not the best in the world.
@@vladimirmaric1719 everything in here is from the 1870s and 1880s, so are long out of copyright, but from many different sources which I forget now, if you look for Eadweard Muybridge reconstructions on YT you will find a lot of the same pieces.
Thank you sir. I will. Regards.
Took a moment - thumbnail image looked like Groucho Marx meets Stu Cook of CCR!!!!
Glimpses of times long ago with the first recorded sounds speaks for itself.
Compared to these Berliners sound like CD's!