Last week, scientists at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory were
able to listen to a play back of what is believed to be the earliest mechanical sound recording.
Made in 1860 by the French typesetter Édouard-Léon Scott de
Martinville, the "phonautogram" features the voice of a woman, believed
to be Scott's daughter, singing a line from the French folk song, "Au
Clair de la Lune." It was made with a device invented by Scott that
used a stylus to etch patterns onto paper coated with smoke from an oil
lamp.
The perfectly preserved recording, along with a handful of other
phonautograms made by Scott, were uncovered in the French patent office
by American audio historians, who sent them to Lawrence Berkeley for
analysis. There, researchers optically scanned the paper strips and
used a virtual stylus and some fancy digital processing to convert the
etched patterns into audible sounds.
The discovery was obviously important for historians because it pushed
back the date for the earliest known recording by 17 years and vaulted
Scott into top billing with Thomas Edison, who made his first
reproducible tin-foil recording in 1877. But it also served as a useful
reminder of how for short a period, in historical terms, music has
existed as an artifact.
Scott de Martinville's smoky etchings were made a little over 147 years
ago, and weren't even meant to be played back. Although Scott applied
for a patent on his method, he saw his work as primarily scientific. A
typesetter by trade, his goal was to record sound visually, so that it
could someday be "read," like text, once someone figured out how to
read it. It took the more entrepreneurial Edison to recognize, 17 years
later, that recordings that could be played back audibly might have
some commercial application.
In historical terms, it is the 130 years since Edison chirped "Mary had
a little lamb" into his phonograph that are the anomaly, a brief
interlude in which the technology of mechanical, and later electronic,
recording could turn music into a physical object and could be subsumed
into an industrial economy. Prior to Edison, popular music was
essentially a folk commodity, owned by no one, available to anyone,
like "Clair de Lune." There were no mechanical rights for Scott to
secure before his daughter warbled it into a tube attached to a stylus.
For most of its history, music was created, shared and performed on a
non-industrial model. Its economic value--insofar as it had any--rested
on its performance, and lasted only as long as the performance lasted.
Today, music's brief interlude as an industrial artifact is coming to
an end, done in by a new technology, one that does not require physical
copies to propagate. We don't yet know for certain what its economic
value will rest on in the future. But the industrial model of charging
for copies of it is fading like the smoke of Scott de Martinville's
lamp.
Paul Sweeting
Paul Sweeting is the Editor of Content Agenda,
a business-to-business brand dedicated to the nexus of content,
technology and business. This piece was originally published on Paul's
blog "Media Wonk" on Content Agenda and is posted on DMW with the author's
permission.
Image
By kreg.steppe
Comments
Post new comment