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Phonautograms (freebie)

Posted by: admin  /  Comments: 9

Its our pleasure to share a very special find with you all. The non-profit organization First Sounds has restored the earliest human audio recordings to a listenable state. Invented in the 1850s by French inventor Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville, these "Phonautograms" actually predate Thomas Edisons earliest recordings by nearly two decades.

They were made by projecting sound into a cylindrical horn attached to a stylus, which in transferred the vibration into lines over the surface of soot-blackened rolls of paper. These captures were purely optical. No device existed which could translate the recorded acoustic information back into sound, until the First Sounds organization acquired the artifacts, with the help of the French Academy of Sciences. They worked with scientists at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and other experts to devise a method of scanning and deciphering the images.

In the spirit of celebrating the past and present day sonic pioneers who brought this piece of history to us, we converted one of the sets into a playable instrument. We chose the D Major scale recording titled "Gamme de la Voix – Vocal Scale (May 17, 1860)", since it made for the most direct and flexible instrument.

You'll notice that the distorted fidelity, pitch and tone yields a smeared and crackling quality, sounding somehow between a frail and warbly voice and a washed out flute. We think it actually sounds beautiful and reminds us of the humble beginnings that modern audio-visual media has grown from. We'd like to thank David Giovannoni and everyone else who worked to restore and share this amazing little piece of history with us. If you happen to make any cool music with this little instrument, please do share it with the folks at First Sounds. They're very interested in hearing how people use these sounds in creative ways.

We've included Kontakt, EXS24 and SFZ formats, as well as a set of synthetic drum sounds made from the same source material. In the Kontakt version, the modwheel controls subtle vibrato and tremolo effects. The download is under 5MB and is absolutely free:

http://www.tonehammer.com/demos/Tonehammer_Phonautograms.rar

 

  • Sample resolution: 44.1Khz/16Bit .wav format
  • Formats: Kontakt (.nki), SFZ (.sfz), EXS24 (.exs)
  • Note: Native Instruments Kontakt 2 / 3 / 4 full retail versions required for all Kontakt instruments.
  • Note: Free Kontakt Player will only work for 30 minutes with this product. Full version required to remove this restriction.
  • Note: Logic or other EXS24 compatible software required for .exs files. SFZ-compatible player required for all .sfz files. Some SFZ and EXS players may not support all included library features.

Little Pump Reeds Demo 1 by Mike Peaslee


Featuring: Phonautograms
Download "Little Pump Reeds Demo 1" mp3 demo

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David Giovannoni Of FirstSounds.Org Discusses The Earliest Recorded Audio

9 Comments

Watch Treme

April 19, 2010

Good day, I love all your posts, keep them coming.

Ed Daley

December 10, 2009

Thank you  !    I really love your creative approach ,and wish you continued success with all your ventures .

Rom

December 2, 2009

Wonderful, the demo track is really good. Thanks

Will

October 1, 2009

Thx More uniqueness 4 my projects

katja

September 28, 2009

thanks!

Pieter S

September 26, 2009

Thanks guys!
wow, this sounds better than a lot of MP3′s out there ;-)

Erik Ekholm

September 26, 2009

Now, THIS is sound design – almost 150 years old!

Alexandre Beneteau

September 25, 2009

Great idea! And generous!
Thanks for this historic library.

Regards,

A.B.

richier

September 25, 2009

Fanstastic!! Awesome! I love it!, lol, thank you so much, and greetings from Colombia!

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