Alexander Graham Bell, The Recording Artist?
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Alexander Graham Bell is best known for the invention of the telephone. However, the brilliant scientist also did a number of other things including, experiment with recording devices to capture sound.
His quest began in 1881 when he teamed up with instrument-maker Charles Sumner Tainter and chemist Chichnester A. Bell to form a company called Volt Laboratory Associates, whose sole purpose was to create sound recordings that could be replayed. It is believed that the trio made about 200 experimental 'soundtracks' using a variety of methods and materials that ranged from glass to tin foil and even beeswax, as they tried to figure out what would hold sound the best. As for the recordings? They went all the way from the word 'barometer' recorded over and over on a glass disc, to recitations of lines from Shakespearean plays
During the same time, Thomas Edison, the inventor of the phonograph, the motion picture camera and of course the light bulb, was also trying to capture sounds. The competition between the two was so fierce that to prove that they were the first ones to succeed, both inventors left documentation and their recordings with the Smithsonian for safekeeping - Where they have lain for the last century, obsolete and unplayable, until now.
Thanks to a partnership between The Library of Congress and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory at the University of California, some of these early recordings can now be re-played for us all to appreciate and also, realize how far we have come.
Using a mapping technology that took $1 million USD and ten years to develop, the researchers were able to recreate high-resolution digital scans of about six of the sound discs, which were released to the general public by the Smithsonian, in late December 2011.
The scientists are hoping to continue with the rest if they are able to secure additional funding - But, even if they do not transfer all the discs, the recovery of these demonstrates the remarkable vision and talent of these remarkable inventors and reinforces their standing as the true pioneers of information technology.
Resources: smithsonianscience.org, gizmag.com
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26 Comments
- SSAover 13 yearsi licke dthis story becuse they fell back on the ather domins
- sunnybunnycutieover 13 yearsTwo claps for Alexander Graham bell! Yay for sound!
- pearl kimover 13 yearsFirst I t hink it`s awsome that people made an recording disc more than a hundred years ago.Second this by reading this artical I learnd that Alexander Graham Bell invented other things then a telephone.For the last I`m very thankful for Alexander Graham Bell and the other people that invented the recording disc.Beacause if they didn`t try to invent the recording disc we would`t have CD`s or ipods right now.
- skittles02over 13 yearshaha cool ohh cool i learned about him in soical studies
- aminaover 13 yearshi i just read this and i realized there was someone like this perosn guess who leonardo divinchi
- izzy272727over 13 yearsFirst, no they are waaaay different Second his name was Leonardo Da Vinci
- izzy272727over 13 yearsi did a book report on him once
- joshuaover 13 yearsThis bores me
- katierox128over 13 yearscool :D
- maddyrocks13over 13 yearscool
- personover 13 yearswow