Johann Kaspar Kerll (1627-1693)
Georg Matthias Monn (1717-1750)
François Giroust (1737-1799)
Supply Belcher (1751-1836)
Theodor Boehm (1794-1881)
Paolo Tosti (1846-1916)
Florence Beatrice Smith Price (1888-1953)
Sol Hurok (1888-1974)
Efrem Zimbalist Sr. (1889-1985)
Julius Patzak (1898-1974)
Paul Robeson (1898-1976)
Antal Doráti (1906-1988)
Tom Lehrer (1928)
Aulis Sallinen (1935)
Jerzy Maksymiuk (1936)
Neil Jenkins (1945)
and
Charles-Pierre Baudelaire (1821-1867)
Gregory Goodwin Pincus (1903-1967)
J. William Fullbright (1905-1995)
Jørn Utzon (1918-2008)
From the former Writer's Almanac:
On this day in 1860, the oldest known recording of the human voice was
made — someone was singing Au Clair de la Lune. French inventor
Edouard-Léon Scott de Martinville captured sound waves on glass plates
using a funnel, two membranes, and a stylus. He made the recording 17
years before Edison made his, but he didn't invent anything to play the
recording back.
When researchers discovered these recordings
three years ago, they assumed the voice singing was a woman's, so they
played it at that speed. But then they re-checked the inventor's notes,
and they realized that the inventor himself had sung the song, very
slowly, carefully enunciating, as if to capture the beautiful totality
of the human voice.
You can hear the astonishing recording at both speeds at firstsounds.org.
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