Thomas Edison wasn’t the first person to record sound. A Frenchman named Edouard-Leon Scott de Martinville actually did it earlier.
He invented a device called the phonautograph, and, on April 9, 1860, recorded someone singing the words, “Au clair de la lune, Pierrot repondit.“ But he never had any intention of playing it back. He just wanted to study the pattern the sound waves made on a sheet of paper blackened by the smoke of an oil lamp.
A group of researchers found some of his old phonautograph papers and used a computer program to play the recording.
“Au clair de la lune,
Mon ami, Pierrot...“
1 view
1103
350
8 hours ago 01:22:50 2
- French Suites
5 days ago 00:35:53 4
BUSH - RARE 1995 Live Footage | GLYCERINE, COMEDOWN & EVERYTHING ZEN & More on 2 Meter Sessions
6 days ago 00:03:47 1
SCOOTER - HOW MUCH IS THE FISH (Metal cover)
2 weeks ago 00:03:57 1
Michael Jackson - Love Never Felt So Good (Official Video)
2 weeks ago 00:04:58 7
Yearn - Yvette Young
1 month ago 00:20:18 1
Scaring the @#$% out of Players with World’s First ACTUAL Airsoft FLAMETHROWER