Listen to the oldest known recording of a human voice | BBC Global

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 7 июл 2024
  • Thomas Edison is often credited with being the first person to record sound.
    But it was in fact a Frenchman named Edouard-Léon Scott de Martinville who invented sound recording via his phonautograph in 1857 - 20 years before Edison invented his phonograph.
    Subscribe to BBC Global: ruclips.net/user/bbc_global?...
    For the latest news, analysis and features visit: www.bbc.com
    #bbc #science #inventions

Комментарии • 878

  • @Shootingstarcomics
    @Shootingstarcomics 6 дней назад +990

    No auto tune back then, just raw talent.

    • @marty4933
      @marty4933 5 дней назад +10

      🤣!

    • @Rhifan01
      @Rhifan01 5 дней назад +4

      😅😂

    • @erikkibler3466
      @erikkibler3466 5 дней назад +5

      😂

    • @akaCol1987
      @akaCol1987 5 дней назад +6

      Simon Cowell would have been so proud if he was alive back then!

    • @LinkRocks
      @LinkRocks 5 дней назад +6

      LOL well done.

  • @coastofkonkan
    @coastofkonkan 12 дней назад +884

    All the way from recording audio on a metal sheet to now streaming it on the internet throughout the world. What an astonishing feat of humanity.

    • @arthurvanparijs6121
      @arthurvanparijs6121 10 дней назад +47

      And it all happened in less than 200 years. Crazy how fast technology progresses!

    • @leinster22
      @leinster22 7 дней назад +50

      Now if humanity would only desist from violence and wars maybe we would have even greater feats

    • @QuarrellaDeVil
      @QuarrellaDeVil 6 дней назад +7

      I remember watching the early photos and whatever else from the New Horizons visit to Pluto on my phone, amazed that, as a kid, this was some cold rock in waytheheckout, and there I was, watching it not on the small black and white screen in my childhood home but a much smaller screen with higher resolution, just a few decades later.

    • @marcmarparran7753
      @marcmarparran7753 4 дня назад

      ​@@leinster22 ⬅️ Found the communist!

    • @zamar2158
      @zamar2158 4 дня назад +1

      Europeans were good with curiosity and making workable applications of their concepts. You guys are aliens, with those alien brains lol.

  • @kerimbozkurt3301
    @kerimbozkurt3301 5 дней назад +496

    Please someone remind the young audience that cassette player is not the ancient recording device from 1860s.

  • @williamlarochelle6833
    @williamlarochelle6833 7 дней назад +610

    The first play was better than the second.

    • @robandrews4815
      @robandrews4815 5 дней назад +52

      That's what I thought too!! Couldn't understand the second. At all.

    • @brianxyz
      @brianxyz 5 дней назад +34

      @@robandrews4815 Second one sounded like a ghost.

    • @Asterra2
      @Asterra2 5 дней назад +23

      I mean... shrug? If you played it back at 4x speed it would sound even better. Obviously halving the speed is going to halve the represented frequencies and make it sound more muffled. If the guy had ever envisioned that his recordings would be used for more than simply studying waveforms on paper, perhaps he would have finetuned it to pick up higher frequencies better, but we got what we got.

    • @Cjnw
      @Cjnw 4 дня назад

      ​@@brianxyzI paid just $23, you've been bamboozled!!!

    • @Lexluthor2024
      @Lexluthor2024 4 дня назад +15

      The first goth song ever.

  • @suzylux
    @suzylux 9 дней назад +702

    Incredible. A long dead voice being exhumed after almost 170 years.

    • @-kattya-
      @-kattya- 6 дней назад +19

      Uh, it sounds eerie and magical😊

    • @lilybond6485
      @lilybond6485 5 дней назад +35

      @suzylux: Little did he know that human beings, over the entire plane in the future, could listen to him sing that song. It wouldn’t even have been conceivable to him that would even be a possibility.

    • @jacobrivers5728
      @jacobrivers5728 5 дней назад +13

      Who said he was dead? Don’t go jumping to conclusions.

    • @Ea-Nasir_Copper_Co
      @Ea-Nasir_Copper_Co 4 дня назад +13

      @@jacobrivers5728Settle down, Dracula.

    • @geigertec5921
      @geigertec5921 4 дня назад +8

      An archeologist found an ancient clay pot from several thousands years BC. It had a pattern on it that had been made with a stick. The grooves made on the pot contained analog information from vibrations transcribed into the clay. He put a laser to the pot and turned it and was able to replay the sound from inside the ancient pottery shop. It didn't sound like much, but it's from the time before the Roman Empire, not bad.

  • @lutello3012
    @lutello3012 10 дней назад +409

    And now we can play it back. [pushes record]

    • @vincentvega5686
      @vincentvega5686 10 дней назад +88

      thats what happens when you ask a gen z to make a vid about old tech lol

    • @easylee
      @easylee 9 дней назад +13

      Hahahah this is too right

    • @e32b61
      @e32b61 8 дней назад +56

      “That was the last surviving copy.”

    • @GentlemanLife-Beyotch
      @GentlemanLife-Beyotch 7 дней назад +8

      Just go back and dele. . .

    • @butterblood
      @butterblood 6 дней назад +23

      I don’t hear anything. Oh my bad, I accidentally recorded over it.

  • @MemphiStig
    @MemphiStig 11 дней назад +222

    Their A&R man said, "I don't hear a single." The future was wide open.

    • @vailpcs4040
      @vailpcs4040 9 дней назад +18

      The sky was the limit.

    • @rescuegirl
      @rescuegirl 9 дней назад +16

      Into the great wide-open.

    • @LordKlektar
      @LordKlektar 7 дней назад +15

      Under them skies of blue

    • @rescuegirl
      @rescuegirl 6 дней назад +13

      A rebel without a clue

    • @QuarrellaDeVil
      @QuarrellaDeVil 6 дней назад +17

      "Experts believe they can make out another voice, saying something about 'more cowbell'".

  • @petergibson2318
    @petergibson2318 10 дней назад +353

    It sounds like a wasp trapped inside a jam jar desperately trying to get out.

    • @AliAthar-rm2pm
      @AliAthar-rm2pm 6 дней назад +6

      hahahahaa hahahaha you made my day

    • @slacktoryrecords4193
      @slacktoryrecords4193 6 дней назад +13

      Yeah. People who throw around the term “lo-fi” today to mean “sparse arrangement” have NO IDEA what lo-fi really means, and they need to listen to this ass recording and get educated.

    • @BAztid
      @BAztid 6 дней назад +4

      Singing potato.

    • @bradmetcalf5333
      @bradmetcalf5333 5 дней назад +4

      Thats exactly what 1860 France was like. Stuck in a jar

    • @justme6655
      @justme6655 5 дней назад

      😂

  • @herzogsbuick
    @herzogsbuick 6 дней назад +102

    ...i don't think you have to be over 30 to realize that the the guy presses record on the cassette deck at the end, and in fact you would hear nothing.

    • @Patrick3183
      @Patrick3183 5 дней назад +1

      😂

    • @RavenMobile
      @RavenMobile 3 дня назад +1

      Usually hitting play and record was for dual cassette decks in order to record from one tape to the other. I dunno what play + record would do on a single tape recorder.

    • @herzogsbuick
      @herzogsbuick 3 дня назад +4

      @@RavenMobile it would record. on that model most likely from a built-in microphone, though it probably had RCA in as well as an external 1/8" microphone jack

  • @PLuMUK54
    @PLuMUK54 3 дня назад +74

    I was expecting, "Your call is very important to us. You are currently number 29 in the queue. Please wait 170 years for the next operative."

    • @evanstar84
      @evanstar84 День назад +3

      I was expecting “we’ve been trying to reach you about your car’s extended warranty.”

    • @PTANV-x2g
      @PTANV-x2g 16 часов назад

      *buggy

    • @PilotDamian
      @PilotDamian 10 часов назад

      😂

    • @brettbuck7362
      @brettbuck7362 2 часа назад

      Oh, you are a Comcast customer, too?

  • @calabrais
    @calabrais 5 дней назад +244

    Why was I expecting the voice to say "We've been trying to reach you about your cars extended warranty"

    • @cintsscha5899
      @cintsscha5899 4 дня назад +4

      😂😂😂😂😂

    • @davidthedeaf
      @davidthedeaf 4 дня назад +1

      Because you are sleepy GenZzz

    • @Colorado_Native
      @Colorado_Native 4 дня назад +6

      Good question. The recording is 170 years old. Perhaps it would be, ""We've been trying to reach you about your horse and buggy's extended warranty."

    • @sgrant39
      @sgrant39 4 дня назад

      OMG

    • @jillschaefer1360
      @jillschaefer1360 3 дня назад

      💀

  • @FurlogTheGiant
    @FurlogTheGiant 5 дней назад +134

    you dont press record on a tape recorder to play

    • @mrcydonia
      @mrcydonia 4 дня назад +29

      He's recording over the precious tape! Somebody stop him!!

    • @Mumblix
      @Mumblix 3 дня назад +4

      Thank you! I thought I was going nuts.

    • @kuldas9299
      @kuldas9299 2 дня назад +4

      Also a tape recorder was in no way used in this process.

    • @rob-time
      @rob-time 14 часов назад +2

      Anyone who knows how to use one of those old tape recorders understands that TWO buttons are required for record, not one. The Play button AND the Record Button.

  • @indigohammer5732
    @indigohammer5732 4 дня назад +16

    The syncing with the tuning fork is very clever

    • @cryptocuz5705
      @cryptocuz5705 День назад +2

      That's also what caught my ear. I instantly thought damn that's good.

  • @cidweinberg
    @cidweinberg 4 дня назад +18

    Fascinating. Standing in my kitchen eating dinner in San Francisco, California 7/16/2024. Listening

  • @martinkinsella6484
    @martinkinsella6484 4 дня назад +38

    Sounds like an angry bee.

  • @theboombapkingdom8628
    @theboombapkingdom8628 3 дня назад +37

    That's incredible! As a recording engineer and music producer I have seen the evolution of audio technology in the past 30 years but to think it all started here makes me understand and marvel at how far the technology has come. Thanks for making this piece.

  • @samuelburleigh1895
    @samuelburleigh1895 4 дня назад +23

    This should be no 1 in the charts.

  • @terrancekayton007
    @terrancekayton007 День назад +9

    Man. I wish I was that encouraged to explore a topic enough to realize an unknown fact of a matter. Bravo to these people.

  • @charlesolver303
    @charlesolver303 11 дней назад +165

    @3:12 - someone accidentally pushes the "RECORD" button and erases the tape...

    • @sforza209
      @sforza209 10 дней назад +11

      Freakin amateurs

    • @007Julie
      @007Julie 9 дней назад +14

      That’s what I thought, he’s recording over whatever they recorded

    • @TesserId
      @TesserId 8 дней назад +10

      That was so obvious I knew someone would comment on that.

    • @QuarrellaDeVil
      @QuarrellaDeVil 6 дней назад +4

      They could use that bit if they do something about the Watergate tapes.

    • @MomMom4Cubs
      @MomMom4Cubs 6 дней назад

      ​@@QuarrellaDeVilI think we're past that.

  • @haileymoore3428
    @haileymoore3428 5 дней назад +17

    this never fails to bring tears to my eyes - can you imagine? of all of the powerful voices of the 1860s - all of the politicians and generals and celebrities - the one voice that has been saved from that time isn't the voice of someone powerful. It's the voice of an ordinary man singing claire de la lune. The first recording we have and it''s a song.

  • @brianarbenz1329
    @brianarbenz1329 5 дней назад +21

    Play it backward and see if you can hear, "Paul is dead!"

  • @Lexyvil
    @Lexyvil 9 дней назад +83

    Summary: Édouard-Léon Scott recorded his voice in 1860 by marking the vibrations (caused by his voice) onto a cylindrical surface. There was no way to play it back, so thanks to this guy in the interview, Patrick Feaster, in 2008 he managed to decode and read from it, resulting in hearing the recorded sound from 1860 for the first time. That's amazing tech, and what is even crazier is knowing it has not yet been 200 years since that discovery. Stories like these really baffles me in how far technology has gone the past few centuries since the industrial revolution.

    • @lilybond6485
      @lilybond6485 5 дней назад

      @Lexyvil: Can’t help but think that something else has been at play here. I don’t believe human beings developed this technology on their own merits. I’m not sure what.

    • @lilybond6485
      @lilybond6485 5 дней назад +3

      @Lexyvil: Thanks for summarizing that.

    • @erikkibler3466
      @erikkibler3466 5 дней назад

      Yeah,they were recording the new slowed down version on a tape recorder.they weren’t using that tape recorder for playback

    • @memathews
      @memathews 5 дней назад +1

      Important Addendum: Scott used the stable frequency of a tuning fork recorded in a track alongside the voice track to remove variations in the hand-cranked speed of the recording. This may be the first known application of frequency clocking, which is used today in all digital applications.

    • @Yamsek
      @Yamsek 4 дня назад +1

      Technically they were not trying to record a voice, they were just trying to ‘see it’ mapped out as the device drew the vibrations for visual representation. It’s remarkable this guy even thought to reverse the process and try to play it!

  • @Plflybit
    @Plflybit 2 дня назад +4

    People ’feel’ a voice. It’s vibratory. Hearing aids went from hon-looking funnels to digital. They weren’t capturing noise, they were capturing vibrations on a grand scale. Bravo.

  • @RICKONORATO
    @RICKONORATO 8 дней назад +69

    That is truly astounding. Like listening to the voice of a ghost

  • @cosmicraysshotsintothelight
    @cosmicraysshotsintothelight 5 дней назад +15

    It is wild as one can hear the "big bowl" sound that the chamber he crafted introduced into the "output transducer". That would qualify as the first audio transducer, in fact. A transducer is a device which converts one form of energy into another. In this case sinusoidal auditory vibrations against a flat membrane "drum head" which then 'transduces' into linear mechanical motion set up to cause a 'stylus' to engrave the vibrations onto a linear 'tape', appearing again to match the sinusoidal signature of the original stimulus. Now we do it with electrons, just like Antonio Meucci did.

  • @bart-v
    @bart-v 2 дня назад +3

    From the time when BBC was still a quality label.

  • @tselengbotlhole750
    @tselengbotlhole750 12 дней назад +113

    The background music is absolutely unnecessary. It is annoying

    • @cdl0
      @cdl0 11 дней назад +9

      Agreed: it is pointless, intrusive, and annoying.

    • @ericschmid
      @ericschmid 11 дней назад +4

      Ah now I can't unheard it!

    • @gergoturan4033
      @gergoturan4033 10 дней назад +3

      It is unnecessary but I don't find it annoying

    • @lutello3012
      @lutello3012 10 дней назад +7

      FAR better than the dogshit on TikTok.

    • @jhonwask
      @jhonwask 9 дней назад +1

      That happens in so many videos and television commercials. I'd rather have dead silence in between spoken word.

  • @user-vp1sc7tt4m
    @user-vp1sc7tt4m 10 дней назад +16

    How many of the commenters here actually got that we may have been been "Listening to the oldest known recording of a human voice" ??

  • @Jeff-66
    @Jeff-66 9 дней назад +111

    Still better than most modern music.

    • @SpiderxPunk
      @SpiderxPunk 6 дней назад +11

      Most modern music won't last 50 years, let alone 170

    • @TonysMusic1974
      @TonysMusic1974 6 дней назад +6

      ​@@SpiderxPunkthe best music of every generation lasts for centuries. 99% gets lost.

    • @weirdnomad8868
      @weirdnomad8868 5 дней назад

      Truth

    • @MagicToenail
      @MagicToenail 4 дня назад

      @@SpiderxPunkPlenty of music from 50 years ago has survived. As for 170 years ago, 99.995% has not survived

    • @asloii_1749
      @asloii_1749 2 дня назад

      @MagicToenail and it’s getting worse by the day. It really sucks

  • @JustWowNick
    @JustWowNick 6 дней назад +14

    Somehow that second version of the recording is harder to understand.

    • @slacktoryrecords4193
      @slacktoryrecords4193 6 дней назад

      Yeah, the speed-corrected one sounds like straight ass compared to the double-speed.

    • @ER-uy7ct
      @ER-uy7ct 3 дня назад +1

      Yes!

  • @GeneRauXxX
    @GeneRauXxX 12 дней назад +29

    I think BBC should really learn improving memory techniques, if you look at the title.

  • @christianwheeler5920
    @christianwheeler5920 7 дней назад +14

    Gave me chills. Wow.

  • @leaedt7614
    @leaedt7614 11 дней назад +9

    You can even hear him rolling the r's when he says 'Pierrot'.

  • @bwhog
    @bwhog 6 дней назад +36

    Now they need to digitally enhance that recording to reveal the undistorted voice.

    • @Asterra2
      @Asterra2 5 дней назад +10

      If you'd ever heard the earliest versions of this recording, you'd already know that they did _considerable_ cleanup on the recording for this video. The original has crackle and pops like the most damaged audio you ever heard from film.

    • @BenvolioCapulet9
      @BenvolioCapulet9 4 дня назад +7

      Autotune. “Lorde ya ya ya sittin on a Wednesday”

    • @ZEROGRAVITY80
      @ZEROGRAVITY80 3 дня назад +4

      ​@@BenvolioCapulet9"Ya Ya Ya, I am Lorde, Ya Ya Ya"

  • @binghobson7122
    @binghobson7122 5 дней назад +9

    I remember hearing this some while ago on a Radio 4 programme. The presenter couldn’t stop herself laughing about it sounding like a bee trapped in a jam jar.

    • @HowardLeVert
      @HowardLeVert 4 дня назад

      Indeed - Charlotte Green in 2008.

  • @Zerpersande
    @Zerpersande День назад +2

    3:14
    Just pushed ‘Record’
    There goes THAT historic recording.

  • @MichaelTavel
    @MichaelTavel 2 дня назад +1

    'Recognizable' is a very generous description of that recording

  • @celltech161
    @celltech161 2 дня назад +3

    Brought to you by the same technology used at drive through windows across the US.

  • @AALavdas
    @AALavdas 10 дней назад +33

    This is a wonderful story, which I have followed for years. But I have a question: what's the point of the clip with the cheapo cassete player in the end? Are we supposedly hearing the voice through this thing? And, if we are, why is the hand pressing the RECORD button?!? Just "play" would suffice...

    • @funnynews6718
      @funnynews6718 8 дней назад +12

      It was probably used as a prop for the video or the clip was taken from another video. Not the best choice.

    • @realryder2626
      @realryder2626 8 дней назад +18

      'Stock footage' filler

    • @cosmicraysshotsintothelight
      @cosmicraysshotsintothelight 5 дней назад

      They should have used a sped up video of a big drip of tar detaching from a big viscometer and falling.

  • @TinLeadHammer
    @TinLeadHammer 11 дней назад +54

    Combing, wrong focus, low resolution, horrible oversharpening, reels and cassettes to illustrate a 19th-century audio, playback is illustrated by pressing record button? What a mess.

    • @jhonwask
      @jhonwask 9 дней назад +7

      I thought I was the only one to notice.

    • @MildMisanthropeMaybeMassive
      @MildMisanthropeMaybeMassive 8 дней назад +6

      As someone with bad OCD, you are my kind of nitpicker.

    • @user-il8qp7px5f
      @user-il8qp7px5f 8 дней назад +2

      Given that the tape recorder indicates it has “One Button Record” I’d assume that given the fact the Play button is already pressed the Record button is functioning as a Pause switch. Although I certainly don’t understand why they would introduce another layer of noise by recording the voice to a cheap tape recorder and replaying the song on it.

    • @Marig_The_Mage
      @Marig_The_Mage 8 дней назад

      @@user-il8qp7px5f It'll be free royalty free stock footage

    • @realryder2626
      @realryder2626 8 дней назад +1

      What's your opinion on politics? I bet you don't miss much

  • @lilybond6485
    @lilybond6485 5 дней назад +15

    Little did that guy know that people in the future, all over the planet, could listen to him sing that song, on a small device they could hold in their hand. It would not even have been conceivable to him that would even be a possibility. What is it now - that we cannot even conceive of that will be an everyday thing 100 years from now ?

  • @BETTERWORLDSGT
    @BETTERWORLDSGT 5 дней назад +3

    Wow! And that was around 50 years before the advent of the automobile!

  • @cenedraleaheldra5275
    @cenedraleaheldra5275 12 дней назад +48

    How is you title about memory, any thing to do with recording the voice…

    • @yugandali
      @yugandali 11 дней назад +12

      Maybe they made a mistake and fixed it, because the title I see, one day after you, is Listen to the oldest known recording of a human voice.

    • @petergibson2318
      @petergibson2318 10 дней назад +3

      A recording is a memory.

    • @Lexyvil
      @Lexyvil 9 дней назад +2

      Seems like they fixed the title.

  • @leemelone6482
    @leemelone6482 5 дней назад +13

    So that’s what Ozzy 🤘sounded like in the early dayz

  • @wesleysanders8570
    @wesleysanders8570 12 дней назад +41

    Interesting short video- but its not about memory?

  • @bozolito108
    @bozolito108 4 дня назад +6

    “Uh yeah it’s gonna be a no for me dog”

  • @moonbeam7702
    @moonbeam7702 3 дня назад +6

    All I really heard was several vibrations rather than a man’s voice

    • @ladybirdlee3058
      @ladybirdlee3058 15 часов назад

      Yes. It doesn't sound like a voice when played slowly.

  • @for-real-countrygirl4192
    @for-real-countrygirl4192 3 часа назад

    I was expecting " we've been trying to reach you about your cars extended warranty "

  • @donpeters9849
    @donpeters9849 6 дней назад +13

    Dude explained it beautifully.

  • @almezini1997
    @almezini1997 12 дней назад +31

    I forgot what this video was about by the end.

    • @zm12123
      @zm12123 9 дней назад +12

      I would probably get that checked out; something is seriously wrong with your brain. Maybe early onset dementia?

    • @chiarosuburekeni9325
      @chiarosuburekeni9325 6 дней назад

      @@zm12123brain rot is real. These mfs have attention spans shorter than fruit flies 💀💀

    • @BAztid
      @BAztid 6 дней назад +3

      It built to the singing potato.

    • @JhonNye96
      @JhonNye96 4 дня назад +1

      Go see a doctor

  • @rickys6770
    @rickys6770 10 часов назад

    "We've been trying to contact you about your vehicle's extended warranty"

  • @SteveI-fg5qt
    @SteveI-fg5qt 4 дня назад +2

    This reminds me of an old Mythbusters episode where they tested the idea that sounds may have been recorded as vibrations on ancient pottery being made. It didnt work but a tantalizing idea.

  • @georgecovetskie6717
    @georgecovetskie6717 19 часов назад

    That guy was just 1 step short of creating the 1st record and/or phone.
    Genius anyway. Great stuff. Thanks for sharing.

  • @danielryan4520
    @danielryan4520 5 дней назад +8

    Can’t believe we got 1876 “Clair de la Lune” before GTA VI 😔

    • @memathews
      @memathews 5 дней назад

      But which was in development longer?😂

  • @Jigger2361
    @Jigger2361 3 дня назад +1

    wow, sounds like my cell service today

  • @jpvq31
    @jpvq31 2 дня назад

    This is beyond amazing. Edouard-Leon must be so proud.

  • @simonsimon325
    @simonsimon325 12 дней назад +4

    In a weird way it worked. It reminded me of Charlotte Green's fits of laughter while reading the news after hearing this recording. So it sort of exercised my memory.

  • @No_Plastic
    @No_Plastic 4 дня назад +2

    Give that to Peter Jackson to clean that up and release as multitrack masterpiece.

  • @memofromessex
    @memofromessex 6 дней назад +3

    There's a recording of a Prussian noble who was born in the 18th century.

  • @yunush
    @yunush 12 часов назад

    How fascinating.. and you can feel all the excitement, glee and joy in Dr Patrick’s voice as he is describing the discovery.. what a smart team of researchers

  • @An00bisY00tubis
    @An00bisY00tubis 8 часов назад

    Play this in someone’s ear right before they fall asleep and they are 100% having nightmares

  • @jeffj2495
    @jeffj2495 7 дней назад +5

    Interesting to hear BUT
    no reel to reel, and no cassette, and NO OTHER magnetic tapes were used. Just some BS in this presentation. Heck, why not show a CD or DVD while they were at it.

    • @memathews
      @memathews 5 дней назад

      Or a wire recorder?

  • @y2an
    @y2an 8 дней назад +4

    So, Edison didn’t invent the phonograph? 😂 Half right. His had playback.

  • @jrkorman
    @jrkorman 3 дня назад +1

    Older than Edison yes, but at least a person doesn't need to be told what Edison was saying.

  • @markmalasics3413
    @markmalasics3413 6 дней назад +3

    It doesn't sound any different that a typical Taylor Swift recording.

  • @Evemeister12
    @Evemeister12 День назад +1

    Sounds like my stomach after a mutton vindaloo.

  • @andrewst9797
    @andrewst9797 10 дней назад +4

    👎 for the background music.

  • @michman2
    @michman2 8 дней назад +13

    While interesting, this is akin to someone writing a book in ink that can't be seen or read. Edison knew that to be useful, the sound has to come back out and be recognizable.

  • @TehDawg
    @TehDawg 21 час назад

    "When played back, is still understandable" Not one single person on this planet could understand a single word of that if you played it to someone who never knew the tune.

  • @PuppetTheatet
    @PuppetTheatet 2 дня назад

    I feel like that's how aliens will have to figure out our recordings

  • @geologyjoerocks
    @geologyjoerocks 10 дней назад +2

    Just can’t escape auto tune these days, lol

  • @modernarcheology2868
    @modernarcheology2868 5 дней назад +2

    I read that Edouard-Léon Scott de Martinville visited the white house and demonstrated this device to Abraham Lincoln. This means that the potential exist for there to be a sound wave diagram of Abraham Lincoln's voice. Wouldn't that be something to hear?

  • @rob-time
    @rob-time 15 часов назад

    How fascinating! The person who did the recording in 1860 could never have imagined that his voice would be heard by people living in 2024! Incredible!

  •  День назад

    Since the first time I knew about this, in my childhood, this piece of recording gave me goosebumps even before hearing it for the first time. I had to wait for the internet to be a thing to search for it. It's one of very few things in the world that is difficult for me to listen.

  • @arias6720
    @arias6720 2 часа назад

    I used to have a mini cassette recorder,I’m hoping it’s in a box in my mom’s garage, I miss it.

  • @slacktoryrecords4193
    @slacktoryrecords4193 6 дней назад +4

    I’m confused as to why that tape recorder in the last shot needed to have its ‘Record’ button pressed if all it was doing was playing back the cassette… ?

  • @MiHiFiDi
    @MiHiFiDi 10 дней назад +4

    I'm listening to someone dead since 1850+?
    I need to hear the whole audio

  • @wintermoonomen
    @wintermoonomen 6 дней назад

    Absolutely amazing! Thanks for sharing this piece of history.

  • @gefloigle
    @gefloigle 4 дня назад +3

    So…recorded on a potato.

  • @isaiasabinadisosagarcia936
    @isaiasabinadisosagarcia936 4 дня назад

    "What sort of music do you listen to?"
    "Oh, just 1800s stuff."
    "Oh so like, classical music?"
    "Yeah, classical music."

  • @Wikusvandemerwe-ny4fk
    @Wikusvandemerwe-ny4fk День назад

    Glad to see casettes are still being used!

  • @LoganLavery
    @LoganLavery 3 дня назад

    I waited two business days for that. Ok thanks.

  • @tatersncorn
    @tatersncorn 2 дня назад

    Gosh this is so beautiful. Now imagine if technology got so good we could find ancient recordings in fossils

  • @Paul-ou1rx
    @Paul-ou1rx День назад

    I thought we were going to hear: "I'm recording this to prove that time travel is possible. See you back in 2008."

  • @_MSHP_
    @_MSHP_ 5 дней назад +1

    As time progresses, we will become more or less astounded i believe.

  • @Yamsek
    @Yamsek 4 дня назад

    Thats pretty amazing… I thought how could it possibly be older than the first Thomas Edison recording? Remarkable

  • @jessica_video_projects
    @jessica_video_projects 4 дня назад

    164 years later we hear his voice .

  • @5starben_
    @5starben_ День назад +1

    Damn just get straight to the point😭

  • @hewgrebe4771
    @hewgrebe4771 4 дня назад

    Amazing to hear a man from so long ago, singing a good song.

  • @user-pw3if8jh4z
    @user-pw3if8jh4z 5 дней назад +1

    I missed the voice of my late grand grandma born in 1897 n passed on in 1993

  • @PreciousPask82
    @PreciousPask82 4 дня назад

    Au clair de la lune, mon ami Pierrot... As a french person, we still sing it to this day. Lovely.

  • @userbosco
    @userbosco 10 дней назад

    Fascinating, for sure. Just put that song on my Spotify.

  • @sheikhmusamakhaan2792
    @sheikhmusamakhaan2792 День назад

    Listening to this relaxing masterpiece while preparing for exams.

  • @brucecook502
    @brucecook502 2 дня назад

    Wow that's pretty cool, listening to a voice from mid-19th century.

  • @Ri5004
    @Ri5004 День назад

    Imagine being that Frenchman knowing that in 170 years he would be discovered as the first human being to have his voice be recorded perfectly and it be played back for proof to the world

  • @ladybirdlee3058
    @ladybirdlee3058 15 часов назад

    The technology to record sound seems really simple and low tech. I don't understand why it wasn't created earlier in human history.

  • @klax001
    @klax001 3 дня назад

    Now they need to find the oldest recorded fart. You know someone had to have recorded one back in the 1800's.

  • @thedancingalien7766
    @thedancingalien7766 2 дня назад +1

    Edison Had A Karaoake Version😂😂😂

  • @StuMas
    @StuMas 7 дней назад +1

    The first voice to be immortalised (relatively speaking).

  • @BugGenerat0r
    @BugGenerat0r 2 дня назад

    Back in our day, we would press “play” to play, which was the style at the time.