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Very interesting! Especially of note from the wiki:

"In 1890, a delegation of Hungarian pilgrims in Turin recorded a short patriotic speech delivered by the elderly Lajos Kossuth. The original recording on two wax cylinders for the Edison phonograph survives to this day, although barely audible due to excess playback and unsuccessful early restoration attempts. Lajos Kossuth is the earliest born person in the world who has his voice preserved."

"unsuccessful easrly restoration attempts" indeed. Cautionary note! Cool that there is a direct link to download the audio as realaudio. Sadly noisy, though...

Lou Judson • Intuitive Audio
415-883-2689

On May 23, 2006, at 7:05 PM, David Lewis wrote:

Jerry,

The oldest person to speak on a surviving recording was Hungarian patriot Laszlo Kossuth, who was born in 1802 and recorded in 1890. The cylinder is on the web at:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kossuth

There was some discussion about this on 78-L some years ago. There was another man, Horatio Perry, who recorded for the Ohio Phonograph company in 1890 on his 100th birthday. None of those cylinders have been found. Someone mentioned that a couple of Irish singers who were yet a little older recorded somewhat later, but these haven't been found and I can't remember the details offhand.

If I'm wrong, please come forward.

Uncle Dave
---------- Original Message ----------------------------------
From: Jerry McBride <jerry.mcbride@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Reply-To: Association for Recorded Sound Discussion List<ARSCLIST@xxxxxxx>
Date: Tue, 23 May 2006 17:19:12 -0700


We recently received this question, and there is probably someone in ARSC
who knows the answer. If you do, I'd be grateful for the help especially if
you can back it up with a reliable source. Thanks



What is the earliest birth date of anyone whose voice has been recorded?


Therefore not, necessarily, the birth date of "oldest" person recorded, nor
the birth date of the first person recorded. But rather, the birth date of
a person who was probably around 100yrs of age when voice recording started
in the 1890s - and possibly therefore was born before 1800.


If this recording no longer exists or cannot for any reason be listened to
- what is the earliest birth date of anyone whose voice has been recorded
that may still be listened to - and how and where can one listen to this
recording.


Jerry McBride, Head Librarian (650) 725-1146
Music Library & Archive of Recorded Sound (650) 725-1145 (fax)
Braun Music Center Jerry.McBride@xxxxxxxxxxxx
541 Lasuen Mall
Stanford University
Stanford, CA 94305-3076





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