In light of the fact that we were trying to puzzle out how films archived on paper could be transferred to a viewable state today in this thread, I thought that others might be interested in
this fascinating article in today's NY Times.
The April, 1860 recording of the human voice is of someone singing “Au Clair de la Lune” that scientists from
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley, CA found in a French archive. Preserved on paper, this recording was made by a forgotten inventor,
Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville, a Parisian typesetter and tinkerer. Previously it was believed that
Thomas Edison's recording of
Mary Had a Little Lamb, made 20 years after de Martinville's achievement, had been the first successful recording of a voice. It's not believed that
Edison knew anything about the Frenchman's contraption when he developed the first practical recording equipment, but that it was one of those cases of simultaneous exploration of new technologies in the same century.
They have
just found a way to hear for this the first time! It's very scratchy, but you can just discern what seems to be an unknown female voice singing in this 8 second clip
The first known recording of a human voice from April 9, 1860
For the sake of comparison, here's a 1931 recording of the same song:
Au Clair Du Lune, 1931 style
How
incroyable to hear anything from a person who lived 148 years ago!!?