Sound Recording. We need to backtrack a bit to understand sound recording.

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Presentation transcript:

Sound Recording

We need to backtrack a bit to understand sound recording

Leon Scott de Martinville - phonautograph Attached a bristle to a membrane at the end of a cone, set the bristle to touch a piece of smoked glass Spoke into the cone membrane vibrated to the sound and the bristle etched a wavy line onto the smoked glass

Spring of 2009 scientists were able to get sound from one of de Martinville’s paper phonautographs – a woman singing for 10 seconds

Thomas Edison

Tinfoil phonograph – 1877

Close-up on bumps

Chichester Bell / Charles Tainter

Bell and Tainter’s phonograph – 1885

Close-up

Emile Berliner

Berliner Gramophone – 1887

Eldridge Johnson / Gramophone

“Little Nipper”

Columbia’s Eagle

Mechanical recording session

Electrical Recording

Valdemar Poulsen

Telegraphone – 1897

Close up of telegraphone

Telegraphone – 1915

Fritz Pfleumer

Magnetic tape

BASF/AEG Magnetophone – 1935

Carbon granule mic

Condenser Microphone

Ribbon mike

Electrical recording session

Cone speaker

Siemans’ dynamic speaker

Radiation speaker

Orthophonic speaker

Speaker construction

Back to tape

Reel to reel tape recorder – 1948

Cassette tape – 1963

Norelco CarryCorder – 1965

8 track tape – 1966

Sony Walkman – 1979

Digital Revolution

Close up of record grooves

CD pits