Leon Scott's COMPLETE DISCOGRAPHY 1853 - 1860

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  • čas přidán 7. 08. 2024
  • The complete audible discography of Edouard Leon Scott de Martinville, the world's first recording artist, and French inventor of the Phonautograph. Although it's believed Scott made hundreds of recording experiments, only 50 survive today, and of those, the following have been educed for listening. Pictures of most of these accompany the sounds you will hear. Special thanks to the researchers at FirstSounds.Org for the sounds and images and their great research !
    0:00 Notes played on guitar by Adolphe Giacomelli (1853 or 1854)
    Plays 2 times !
    0:06 First ever voice recording captured from the air (1853 or 1854)
    Plays 3 times !
    The above two recordings are Scott's first experiments, a proof of concept made before his device was completely built.
    0:11 Phonautography of the voice at a distance (March 1857)
    0:17 Song of the voice, changes in tone (July 1857)
    1:25 Song at a distance ("The Echoes") (August 17, 1857)
    1:43 Ashen Pipe (Aug - Oct. 1857)
    2:15 Stylus of Bristle (Aug - Oct. 1857)
    3:10 The Sound of a Deep Voice (October 1857)
    3:26 The Lord's Prayer (October 1857)
    3:50 Study of the Timber of the Voice (November 1857)
    4:20 The Timber of the Cornet (December 1857)
    All the above recordings were made with no timecode listed by Scott, so we can only guess at a proper playback speed. All are believed to feature the voice of Leon Scott except the 1853 guitar solo, the "Song at a Distance", with a possible young girl guest vocalist, and "The Timber of the Cornet" with an unidentified cornet performer.
    4:32 Tuning Fork Vibrating at 435 Hz (Late 1859)
    At This point, Scott was using a tuning fork timecode for his recordings, so proper intelligble playback is possible.
    4:39 Au Clair de la Lune (at 2 speeds, in 2 different takes.) (April 9 & 20, 1860)
    5:11 Shakespeare : Othello excerp (2 takes) (April 17 & 18 1860)
    5:50 R, I, RI, R, A, RA, RIRA (Will Laugh) (April 18, 1860)
    6:08 Racine : Phedre (excerp) (April 19, 1860)
    6:30 Tasso : Aminta (excerp) (April - May 1860)
    6:45 Vocal Scale (May 17, 1860)
    7:04 Cherubini : Et Incarnatus Est (Sept 1, 1860)
    7:21 Masse : Fly, Little Bee (September 1860, or later)
    Update : Visit my channel to hear the 1857 cornet recording in restored condition, with it's pitches corrected to a proper playback performance.

Komentáře • 334

  • @orionsuniversepart2932
    @orionsuniversepart2932 Před 2 lety +249

    Fun fact: Did you know that those primitive sound recordings were never intended for playback? The sounds were just imprinted on stoveblack paper. When scientists discovered those ancient sounds, they analyzed the soundwaves imprinted onto computer and reproduced it into sound that we can hear. (For those who didn’t know)

    • @ohmygoshitscole
      @ohmygoshitscole Před rokem +16

      That’s crazy. Back then he just drew a picture of the sound, and now we can turn the drawing back into a voice

    • @GetOutsideYourself
      @GetOutsideYourself Před 9 měsíci +4

      He was a stenographer, looking for a more efficient way to quickly transcribe. It didn't occur to him to include playback.

  • @SatellaNNW
    @SatellaNNW Před 6 lety +130

    6:46 Do Re Mi Fa Sol La Si Doooo!!!!!! AMAZING!!!!!

  • @zlymaciek
    @zlymaciek Před 5 lety +202

    Still better quality than voicechat kids mics on CSGO

  • @alexanderstiefelmann5982
    @alexanderstiefelmann5982 Před 8 lety +308

    The pre-1859 recordings are completely unintelligible - no wonder many consider the first "true" audio to be "Au Clair de la Lune".

    • @slayerfiend
      @slayerfiend Před 5 lety +36

      the cornet is intelligible

    • @ferociousgumby
      @ferociousgumby Před 4 lety +15

      I believe that may well be an elaborate form of autotune. You hear what you want to hear.This made a HUGE splash when it came to light, then sort of petered out. The web site hasn't been updated in 15 years.

    • @xxfalconarasxx5659
      @xxfalconarasxx5659 Před 3 lety +38

      That's because he didn't start putting timecodes in his recordings until 1859, so it is difficult to discern what the proper playback speed would be, and trying to correct the playback speed is a nightmare to do, because the playback speed of his recordings would constantly fluctuate, depending on the speed in which Leon rotated the hand crank. The Tuning Fork recording he made in 1859 was a major breakthrough, as it was the first time he was able to implement timecodes for calibration.
      The only pre-1859 recording that has been properly reconstructed is his Cornet Recording from 1857, which isn't in this video (but a link is in the description). I would assume scientists were able to make sense of this one because of the simplicity of the sound, being merely a scale recording. Hopefully more of his uncalibrated recordings will be deciphered in the future. Unfortunately, the pre-1857 recordings might never be fully deciphered, not just because of the lack of timecodes, but because they were recorded using an unfinished prototype of his phonautograph, which could only record in brief snippets, and filled the recordings with artifacts.

    • @hamburgerhamburger4064
      @hamburgerhamburger4064 Před 3 lety +4

      The 1857 is partially understandable but not to many

    • @hamburgerhamburger4064
      @hamburgerhamburger4064 Před 3 lety +1

      Not all of them, jut one in specific

  • @ryangray2846
    @ryangray2846 Před 8 lety +162

    He's telling the future to listen to his mixtape.

    • @Leukefilms
      @Leukefilms Před 3 lety +1

      My laughing chimney is a creepy guy

  • @miguelreynoso8437
    @miguelreynoso8437 Před 5 lety +53

    3:27 hardstyle from 1800s!!

  • @ultimatethwallbrkr
    @ultimatethwallbrkr Před 5 lety +46

    6:30 his real voice

  • @joshj8597
    @joshj8597 Před 9 lety +353

    I was born in the wrong generation! This is the music of my generation!

    • @daMacadamBlob
      @daMacadamBlob Před 4 lety +16

      Seuls les enfants des années 1850 se souviendront de ça

    • @starrequiem6053
      @starrequiem6053 Před 2 lety +7

      LMAOOOO

    • @michaeltoner1993
      @michaeltoner1993 Před rokem +7

      I'm 18 and don't like the music any of my friends listen to, Leon Scott's is where it's at!

  • @JacksonTheEpic
    @JacksonTheEpic Před 5 lety +56

    It’s so weird to think that I’m hearing shit from almost 200 years ago

  • @Silligk
    @Silligk Před 6 lety +44

    i wonder if he has any living family, imagine how weird it must be to hear you great-great-great-great-father on recording

    • @JimPigMuseumOfSound
      @JimPigMuseumOfSound  Před 6 lety +35

      Edouard's great-grandson, Laurent Scott de Martinville, made an appearance with the FirstSounds group at the 200th birthday celebration of Edouard in 2017 ; this video is available on CZcams.

    • @danielcarneiro5483
      @danielcarneiro5483 Před 2 lety +7

      he has a great grandson and he made a speech

  • @TomokoAbe_
    @TomokoAbe_ Před rokem +32

    Ghostly sounds from the past centuries old--truly amazing and gives me chills listening to these sounds long gone and dead.

  • @radhwangothic
    @radhwangothic Před 7 lety +160

    When you are in the car and it is your turn to take the AUX.

  • @deliusamat7705
    @deliusamat7705 Před 9 lety +109

    it's quite the experience listening to these recordings while reading horror stories

  • @SouthwesternEagle
    @SouthwesternEagle Před 8 lety +150

    The first track was a real guitar solo? Holy crap! That's 1853 rock! xP

    • @JimPigMuseumOfSound
      @JimPigMuseumOfSound  Před 8 lety +44

      What sounds like a 4 note guitar solo is really 4 different recordings, each a snippet of a guitar performance. In 1853, Scott's phonautograph was still in it's proof-of-concept stage, and could only record very brief recordings.

    • @Night-qs4co
      @Night-qs4co Před 8 lety +8

      +Joe Orbin I thought that the first sound recording was made in 1859 to the year rather than in 1853 and it was. Because Leon Scott de Martnevill filed a patent application for his invention in 1857 th. And for the first time his voice is imprinted in the 1860th , and not in 1853 - ohm guitar and even more such celebrities as Adolf Giacomelli . As if he would give up everything and come running up to him and start to play the guitar . Since he is not having phonoautograph imprinted sound? And why on this audio recording no documentary evidence?

    • @JimPigMuseumOfSound
      @JimPigMuseumOfSound  Před 8 lety +14

      +Вася Пупкин For more information on the first experiments of Scott de Martinville, go to the First Sounds web site, firstsounds.org, and check out Patrick Feaster's Discography of Scott de Martinville link, pages 49 - 50. You can get there under the Quick Links section of their main page, under Edouard Leon Scott de Martinville. First Sounds remains the experts of Scott's work.

    • @Night-qs4co
      @Night-qs4co Před 8 lety +4

      thank you very much!!!

    • @jadewarrior6665
      @jadewarrior6665 Před 8 lety +36

      ikr 1850's music is so good I'm only 14 years old and i listen to Leon Scott i wish kids nowaday knew about 1850s music i was so born in the wrong generation

  • @-yeme-
    @-yeme- Před 2 lety +43

    I wonder how he improved his device, like what was his process, considering he had no means of replaying his recordings to see how good or bad they were. but theres a clear progression in quality from the first attempts which really just registered that a noise had been made rather than accurately transcribing any of its characteristics, to more or less audible human speech

    • @Miakhano
      @Miakhano Před rokem +7

      Leon Scott added tone correction signal to his recordings so we now can correct uneven speed of playback. That's why his works are much more audible since 1860.

    • @jimmyjudha8424
      @jimmyjudha8424 Před 3 měsíci

      Let's read his paper. I also wonder with the same question.
      He might visually see the wave amplitude like today electrical engineer see oscilloscope.
      Or he might try different of his recoding device to get bigger wave amplitude and has better frequency response by seeing how waveform appear.
      Or just see how sound wave look like and compare with others device. At that time they can change sound to water wave and other device that shows sound wave is already exit.

  • @Relevance334
    @Relevance334 Před 3 lety +8

    adults : historical sound recording
    teens : science projects
    kids : sound of a mosquito flying

  • @godstroke
    @godstroke Před 7 lety +47

    Fly little bee literally sounds like a bee though.

  • @Alex-yy5wo
    @Alex-yy5wo Před 2 lety +9

    This is my party, we’re listening to my 1850s mixtape

  • @furbabies11
    @furbabies11 Před rokem +11

    I bet he didn't think his hottest album of the 19th century would be trending on CZcams still.

  • @zzascha5512
    @zzascha5512 Před 7 lety +51

    Try listening to this and looking at Daguerreotypes. The creepiness will be completely amped up.

  • @thetriumphofthethrill2457
    @thetriumphofthethrill2457 Před 7 lety +55

    Fascinating, thanks for sharing. And all the while I thought Edison's discovery was the oldest. One can witness the progress of the invention as the recording unfolds.

    • @Sarah.Riedel
      @Sarah.Riedel Před 6 lety +16

      The Triumph of the Thrill honestly Edison's true great talent was plagarism. He ripped off just about every one of his so-called "inventions." Really awful dude tbh.

    • @KK-pq6lu
      @KK-pq6lu Před 2 lety +1

      Edison’s discovery was and is brilliant, and stunned everyone at the time. No one had any idea how to play back any recording or even thought of playing back - the goal at the time was to train people to read the squiggles! Edison figured out to impress the audio wave up and down into the foil - not sideways - which allowed him to reproduce the sound. The ability to pick up the grooves sideways was a decades later invention.

    • @defanserb
      @defanserb Před 2 lety

      @@KK-pq6lu edison is a fraud

    • @michaelcoder9119
      @michaelcoder9119 Před rokem

      @Reidel Your agenda is flawed in the way that invention isn't only creation, but Improvement.

  • @kickassdragonwarrior3346
    @kickassdragonwarrior3346 Před 6 lety +28

    Omg this is creepy, but magical at the same time...

  • @doctorhamburger1346
    @doctorhamburger1346 Před 8 lety +9

    This is fascinating. Thanks for posting and annotating it.

  • @gabriella280659
    @gabriella280659 Před 10 lety +18

    Thank you very much for this sharing!

  • @jeffbogue5022
    @jeffbogue5022 Před 3 lety +12

    If we would have lived back then we would have been in awe of this new awesome invention

    • @CoolCademMAnimates-fz1ui
      @CoolCademMAnimates-fz1ui Před rokem

      Actually Scott was hardly recognized and until 2008 when his recordings were found, Thomas Edison & the Phonograph took all the credit.

  • @lodke1697
    @lodke1697 Před 5 lety +18

    0:00 Thrashiest guitar riff in the history of thrash metal

  • @BSNFabricating
    @BSNFabricating Před 5 lety +33

    I still want to hear that long-lost recording of Lincoln's voice. I know somebody has it hidden in their attic.

    • @japanfanatic1415
      @japanfanatic1415 Před 4 lety +4

      doesn't exist

    • @xxfalconarasxx5659
      @xxfalconarasxx5659 Před 3 lety +13

      There is no recording of Lincoln's voice. There are a lot of rumours on the internet that he recorded Lincoln's voice in 1863, but in reality, Leon abandoned his project in 1860, due to financial problems, and donated most of his work to science academies. This was before Lincoln even became president.

    • @jameshaley7665
      @jameshaley7665 Před 2 lety +4

      I don't think Leon even knew or was interested in Lincoln. Even if he wanted to record Lincoln's voice, he wouldn't be able to due to the US going through a Civil War during Lincoln's presidency.

    • @CoolCademMAnimates-fz1ui
      @CoolCademMAnimates-fz1ui Před rokem +3

      There are no Abraham Lincoln recordings. Scott only made 1 phonautograph for his own personal use, usually at home in France. And his machine never left France.

    • @noellemcclain
      @noellemcclain Před 10 měsíci

      We can only assume what he sounded like with dialect accounts

  • @AtlasCalavera69
    @AtlasCalavera69 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Very cool Knowing That Originally The First Recordings With The Phonautograph Only Could Record 1 Second, and the recordings in 1857 could record more than one minute, Im a fan Of this Channel!

  • @Aqua.man045
    @Aqua.man045 Před 9 lety +54

    0:00-0:03 first guitar riff.

    • @Aqua.man045
      @Aqua.man045 Před 9 lety +14

      Also at 0:11 is him shooting a gun. Trying to see what it sound like in a recording.

    • @duff06
      @duff06 Před 6 lety +1

      A LAZER GUN, at that! First recording of a PEWW PEWWW

    • @WaffleAbuser
      @WaffleAbuser Před 6 lety +5

      First *recorded* guitar riff, you mean.

  • @JohnDoe-zh4li
    @JohnDoe-zh4li Před 7 lety +23

    So primitive... it seems our modern technology dwarfs, if not obliterates, these 150-something-year-old recordings. Still, revolutionary at the time!

  • @Kemns_Art
    @Kemns_Art Před 7 lety +20

    6:46 "Do, Re, Mi, Fa, Sol, La, Si, Do". (C, D, E, F, G, A, B, G)

  • @colinmontgomery5492
    @colinmontgomery5492 Před 4 lety +2

    Wow. Absolutely amazing. Thanks for sharing.

  • @BigHushAffiliate
    @BigHushAffiliate Před 10 měsíci +2

    Awesome Album cant wait for part 2!

  • @randomvideos8722
    @randomvideos8722 Před 4 lety +5

    0:00 Only 1853 kids will remember.

  • @maniaque37
    @maniaque37 Před 7 lety +12

    why people have to post stupid comments... better say nothing than this! this is so great to hear those weird sounds... its how it all begun and theres nothing to joke about. your jokes aint funny at all.

  • @Mirkoyanque
    @Mirkoyanque Před 9 lety +411

    Still better than Justin Bieber

    • @QueenElsa1845
      @QueenElsa1845 Před 9 lety +4

      Mirkoyanque XD

    • @mylesmccloud8746
      @mylesmccloud8746 Před 9 lety +20

      +Mirkoyanque Given the choice, I'd rather listen to a French inventor from the 19th Century sing horribly than listen to that no-talent Justin Bieber.

    • @jamesgibby4018
      @jamesgibby4018 Před 8 lety +6

      +McLeod Enterprises (Myles McLeod) he did not sing horribly it's the system that he made

    • @jamesgibby4018
      @jamesgibby4018 Před 8 lety +1

      +McLeod Enterprises (Myles McLeod) he did not sing horribly it's the system that he made

    • @bornana269
      @bornana269 Před 3 lety +3

      @@mylesmccloud8746 lmao i remember being 9 and hating justin just because everyone else did for no reason

  • @Chubachus
    @Chubachus Před 8 lety +15

    Very fascinating.

  • @williampryor4306
    @williampryor4306 Před 7 lety +14

    This is so old.

  • @h0g_27
    @h0g_27 Před 8 lety +47

    I was born in the wrong generation. THIS is real audio!

  • @daMacadamBlob
    @daMacadamBlob Před 4 lety +4

    We will never have music like this ever again

  • @godspeed6096
    @godspeed6096 Před 3 lety +5

    When our grandparents were young and listened to oldies, their grandparents were saying: "you young folks know nothing about music.We had the best music, not that oldies crap"

  • @xemy1010
    @xemy1010 Před 5 lety +3

    Absolutely fascinating!

  • @disgruntledunicorn007
    @disgruntledunicorn007 Před 3 lety +2

    From 4.40 it's like you've hopped out of the Delorean, it's raining so you find shelter in a dark building and while you lean your back against a wall to rest, you hear a guy trying to record himself.

  • @esperamosendios3602
    @esperamosendios3602 Před 3 lety +4

    Fantástico
    Me ha trasladado a una época memorable y lo he disfrutado

  • @rayman17578
    @rayman17578 Před 3 lety +7

    I wish he made more

  • @Lottistari
    @Lottistari Před 3 lety +5

    0:01 what a bop

  • @Mr.Obongo
    @Mr.Obongo Před 7 lety +23

    3:26 dropping some dope ass beats

  • @faithisaenergy5519
    @faithisaenergy5519 Před 3 lety +3

    "When your great great great great grandfsther sends you his mixtape"

  • @LaurentJames
    @LaurentJames Před 7 lety +8

    Né le 25 avril 1817, Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville a été le premier chanteur de l'histoire à avoir enregistré sa voix, grâce à son phonautographe (antérieur de vingt ans au phonographe d'Edison).
    Scott de Martinville habitait en 1870 au 9 de la rue Vivienne, alors que Lautréamont habitait au numéro 15 !!! Dénichera-t-on un jour l'enregistrement de la voix d'Isidore Ducasse ?

  • @jamesatwellchannel
    @jamesatwellchannel Před 8 lety +34

    sounds like he had a great case of the runs that day and left the phonautograph on...

    • @DanneoYT
      @DanneoYT Před 6 lety +6

      Well done sir, you've won the internet for today

    • @nathanbigsby8604
      @nathanbigsby8604 Před 5 lety +6

      That's what I was thinking, this guys farts ripped a hole in the space time continuum.

  • @RetroFan
    @RetroFan Před 7 lety +33

    I'm going to try enhancing these in audacity.

    • @Ant-mf1ru
      @Ant-mf1ru Před 6 lety +2

      ha ha, I was thinking about doin' the same :) did you get anything interesting ?

    • @sdasda4654
      @sdasda4654 Před 4 lety +4

      @Libertatem Veritas 3 months later, this comment made my night. Thank you

  • @ferociousgumby
    @ferociousgumby Před 5 lety +2

    I won't sleep tonight.

  • @alexhippie2
    @alexhippie2 Před 7 lety +23

    I wonder if one could EQ and fix the sound to isolate the voices etc

    • @Erica_Obviously
      @Erica_Obviously Před 7 lety +16

      They have tried but unfortunately this is truly the best they can get. The way they were recorded made the sound waves extremely inconsistent so today's technology had to piece it together the best it could.

    • @zzascha5512
      @zzascha5512 Před 7 lety +6

      @alexhippie2 Actually, they have fixed the sound with one, that being the 1857 phonautogram of the cornet.

    • @filthylucreonyoutube
      @filthylucreonyoutube Před 3 lety +6

      As I write this in January of 2021, I can upload a B&W photo to a website that uses AI to colorize that photo. What will machine learning bring to these sonograms? I predict these will be rendered to the natural speaking voice of this man very soon. HiFi cylinder recordings? Get ready!

    • @IPlayWithFire135
      @IPlayWithFire135 Před 2 lety +2

      @@filthylucreonyoutube We could easily use machine learning to create a crystal clear audio, but it would be only based on the recording. It still might be faithful to how it should sound.

  • @seannaniganss
    @seannaniganss Před 10 lety +6

    Thanks for posting these! I've been looking for these! Where did you find them?

    • @JimPigMuseumOfSound
      @JimPigMuseumOfSound  Před 10 lety +5

      UltraCake Many of these came from Patrick Feaster's book "Pictures of Sound". If you are interested in old sound, this book is highly recommended. A few other Scott recordings, namely the 1853 experiments and the cornet solo, were played by the First Sounds group at their live presentations, and are not featured on their web site.

    • @jonbowifdashoez
      @jonbowifdashoez Před 7 lety

      UltraCakePlay hell

  • @Daxiloft
    @Daxiloft Před 9 lety +40

    ATTENTION 1853 HAD THE ATARI 2600

  • @clementeabyss8953
    @clementeabyss8953 Před 5 lety +6

    Merzbow new album is on 🔥

  • @frantisekhabrda4586
    @frantisekhabrda4586 Před 3 měsíci

    Total the most great. Only the waves on the piece on paper. He couldn't know, that nowadays the scientsts make it through, to give his voice into the audio format. Great!!

  • @erikchavarin6085
    @erikchavarin6085 Před 3 lety +4

    I was constipated once and had a moment similar to 3:10 and I could visibly see my stomach deflate.

  • @hdkdhdodhdnddjfkfjfofkfofo1453

    At the "Ashen Pipe" recording, the date was wroten as: "octobre 1857".
    So it means that the "Ashen Pipe" recording was from October 1857.

  • @Absolutely_puck_fakestine

    I'm 10 years old and i like this !

  • @jimmyjudha8424
    @jimmyjudha8424 Před 3 měsíci

    This is storage oscilloscope in 1800.
    I am very appreciated what his demonstration.

  • @MrPaevo
    @MrPaevo Před 6 lety +3

    So much warmer than CDs....

  • @atomlightstone
    @atomlightstone Před 5 lety +1

    Tbh this guy has better sound recording equipment than I do

  • @kargaroc386
    @kargaroc386 Před rokem +1

    and this was an entire lifetime before most people had record players.

  • @dogsareawesome9197
    @dogsareawesome9197 Před 3 lety +5

    0:22 first sound recording of a fart

  • @aliikman8199
    @aliikman8199 Před 9 dny

    6:46 today is Tuesday July 30th 2024 and I just heard a dead man from Thursday May 17th 1860 (164 years, 2 months, 14 days ago ) singing to me ... Words cannot comprehend this, it's like time travel isn't some scientific theory or fantasy but exactly what I just did

  • @LoganL2008
    @LoganL2008 Před 10 měsíci

    these are some serious bangers

  • @user-ob9zo9cr4c
    @user-ob9zo9cr4c Před 6 měsíci +1

    when he gonna drop new album?
    streamings? gig at all?

  • @sheisbrit17
    @sheisbrit17 Před 3 lety +3

    Idk what I thought I was going to hear from well over 100 year old recordings. I really came here expecting to understand the noises.😂🤦‍♀️

  • @anniarog777
    @anniarog777 Před 4 lety +3

    Its the first tekno-music too

  • @aughjaiuruskk
    @aughjaiuruskk Před 3 měsíci +1

    Wow a lot of people were alive on that point like Abraham Lincoln, Franklin Pierce, Martin Van Buren, William R. King (possibly) and.......
    John Wilkes Booth

  • @CoolCademMAnimates-fz1ui

    Still better than my mic

  • @zebif2911
    @zebif2911 Před 4 lety

    merci pour cet ajout à la communauté

  • @iamdamosuzuki_
    @iamdamosuzuki_ Před 4 lety +4

    So Harsh Noise is actually the oldest type of recorded music?

  • @sir_dark_humor8673
    @sir_dark_humor8673 Před 2 lety +3

    1:32 sounds like high pitched/ distorted farts

  • @b0ltun0
    @b0ltun0 Před 3 lety +3

    HOW did they even manage to record soundwaves? its kinda fascinating

    • @JimPigMuseumOfSound
      @JimPigMuseumOfSound  Před 3 lety +10

      A horn with a membrane, and a pig's bristle for a stylus, scratching onto a moving piece of paper blackened by soot from an oil lamp. Yea, kinda fascinating.

  • @williampalenik7306
    @williampalenik7306 Před 3 lety +1

    We had to start somewhere to start and record sound music etc.

  • @sikkuburo5267
    @sikkuburo5267 Před 4 lety +3

    That guitar at the beginning sounds almost exactly like the walking sound from Donkey Kong

  • @therestorationofdrwho1865

    How where these done?

  • @jawwwp428
    @jawwwp428 Před 3 lety +1

    Can you do “complete discography of Joseph niepce”

  • @user-ob9zo9cr4c
    @user-ob9zo9cr4c Před 6 měsíci +1

    best thx

  • @Finti-jg1jj
    @Finti-jg1jj Před 9 měsíci +2

    Still waiting for the next album

  • @th-bt6fn
    @th-bt6fn Před 3 lety +1

    I can't believe living in the 19th century sounded like this!

  • @gaminawulfsdottir3253
    @gaminawulfsdottir3253 Před 4 lety +3

    This discography has no discs in it.

  • @itsallgood3210
    @itsallgood3210 Před 8 lety +5

    AT 1:35, Sounds like Curly from the Three Stooges

  • @therestorationofdrwho1865

    Also I don't get these, were they just making random vibrations to see if they could recreate a random sound?

    • @isaacbruner65
      @isaacbruner65 Před 4 lety +1

      They were proving a sound could be recorded in visual format on a sooty piece of paper by the vibration of a stylus made out of a boar bristle with a bit of feather stuck on the end ;) Considering that, the results were spectacular.

  • @Nick-kc6bt
    @Nick-kc6bt Před 4 měsíci +1

    As argentinian i most say the first sound recorded in 1853 is as old as the constitution of my country.

  • @LB-vb3jq
    @LB-vb3jq Před 2 lety +1

    And Harsh Noise Wall was officially invented.

  • @azathoth0820
    @azathoth0820 Před 7 lety +1

    first ever playlist

  • @opalyasu7159
    @opalyasu7159 Před rokem +2

    The sound of a man zipping his long coat

  • @andrewdemetrius8090
    @andrewdemetrius8090 Před rokem

    Can't wait for the 2023 8 CD remastered boxed set, with outtakes and rehearsals........

  • @martink5186
    @martink5186 Před 4 lety

    incredible

  • @nspcrazy1122
    @nspcrazy1122 Před rokem +3

    What kind of music do you like?
    50's music.
    Do you like Elvis Presley, Chubby Checker, the Big Bopper?
    No, 1850's music. Like The Echoes, by Leon Scott.

    • @JimPigMuseumOfSound
      @JimPigMuseumOfSound  Před rokem

      How about Strauss, Liszt, and Wagner?

    • @nspcrazy1122
      @nspcrazy1122 Před rokem +2

      @@JimPigMuseumOfSound There are phonautograms of them? I'd love to hear them.

  • @AGR01
    @AGR01 Před 6 lety +1

    I'm gonna try fixing those audios.

  • @IceCreamMeatballs
    @IceCreamMeatballs Před 5 lety +2

    Please come to Brazil

  • @user-ob9zo9cr4c
    @user-ob9zo9cr4c Před 6 měsíci +1

    this is real Merzbow, first noise artist at all

  • @memiest1119
    @memiest1119 Před 3 lety +2

    These Beats Slap Tho

  • @Mr.Obongo
    @Mr.Obongo Před 7 lety +1

    I thought the first sound ever recorded was in 1860... so there are older recordings he's done? When we're these discovered?

    • @isaacbruner65
      @isaacbruner65 Před 4 lety

      The first discernible voice recording was in 1860.

    • @xxfalconarasxx5659
      @xxfalconarasxx5659 Před 3 lety +1

      The recordings that they had available back in 2008 was limited. They were able to track down more that were stored in other laboratories and science academies since. Unfortunately, he didn't put timecodes in his recordings until the end of 1859, which is when he began implementing a tuning fork into his device for calibration. So, almost all of his recordings prior to 1859 are unintelligible. However, one recording from 1857 was successfully and painstakingly reconstructed in 2014, which is a cornet scale recording. Leon also made voice recordings prior to Au Clair de la Lune, but they have yet to be properly reconstructed.

  • @chillindillon3329
    @chillindillon3329 Před 29 dny

    Can you try to restore song of the voice?

  • @xaviergutierrez278
    @xaviergutierrez278 Před 3 lety +3

    yeah!! this is real music