Mike Penney's “The Sound of a Voice”. The Early History of Sound Recording and Telephony

 

 

The Sound of a Voice

 

Mike Penney’s page devoted to Victorian sound recording and telephony 

 

 

 

THE PHONOGRAPH SPEAKING TO PROFESSOR TYNDALL

From ‘The Illustrated London News’, August 3rd, 1878

 

This site features a selection of articles from old books and technical journals.  Alexander Graham Bell’s ‘Researches in Electric Telephony’ appears beside descriptions of obscure devices such as Lambrigot’s phonograph, Walker’s octuple telephone and Taylor’s phoneidoscope.    

I have copied all the articles from the original publications.  Everything is complete and verbatim, except where stated otherwise.  Comments added by myself are this colour.

 

 

Sound Recording

 

Before the invention of the phonograph, many researchers developed instruments that could record the shape of sound waves.  The phonautograph of Léon Scott (1857), further developed by Rudolf König, is perhaps the best known machine. 

William Henry Barlow demonstrated his own, less well known, instrument to the Royal Society in 1874.  His ‘Logograph’ performed a similar function to Scott’s phonautograph, but with closer coupling of the speaker’s mouth to the recording diaphragm.  Some traces of a voice are reproduced in Barlow’s paper presented to the Royal Society.  Presumably the traces were made by Barlow himself.  I thought, for a brief moment, that it might be possible to recreate his voice… but of course the traces are recorded far too slowly.

Barlow demonstrated his Logograph to the Society of Telegraph Engineers in 1878, but he was surely overshadowed by the tinfoil phonographs demonstrated on the same day.

 

 

“Phonautographe de Léon Scott de Martinville”

From Alfred Niaudet’s Téléphones et Phonographes

Published approx. 1885

 

Barlow's Logograph

 

“On the Pneumatic Action which accompanies the Articulation of Sounds by the Human Voice, as exhibited by a Recording Instrument” 

An extract from W. H. Barlow’s paper presented to the Royal Society

 

In this paper Barlow describes his ‘Logograph’ and gives several traces of complete words and sentences, including the word ‘Incomprehensibility’, and lines from the poem ‘Hohenlinden’.

Unfortunately I have lost some of the pages of the original book (The Proceedings of the Royal Society, 1874), which I extracted from a university dustbin!

16 April 1874

 

Thomas Alva Edison’s tinfoil phonograph described in Engineering

 

This is a reprint of an article from ‘Scientific American’.

                                                  

When it becomes possible, as it doubtless will, to magnify the sound, the voices of such singers as Parepa and Titiens will not die with them, but will remain as long as the metal in which they may be embodied will last.”

 

According to Roland Gelatt in The Fabulous Phonograph, Parepa and Titiens were then ‘recently deceased’.

18 January 1878

 

Barlow's Logograph

 

W. H. Barlow demonstrates his ‘Logograph’ to the Society of Telegraph Engineers

 

Barlow’s machine seems unchanged since its appearance before the Royal Society in 1874.

27 February 1878

 

Edison's Phonograph

 

W. H. Preece introduces the tinfoil phonograph to the Society of Telegraph Engineers

 

Preece demonstrates Edmunds’ phonoscope;  Puskas demonstrates Edison’s hand-cranked phonograph;  Pidgeon and his son demonstrate their copy of an Edison phonograph with twin diaphragms;  Stroh demonstrates his clockwork Edison phonograph;  Spagnoletti sings!

27 February 1878

 

Edison’s tinfoil phonograph described in Engineering

 

Edison’s hand-cranked phonograph and Stroh’s clockwork Edison phonograph are described.

Some of the first demonstrations of the phonograph and telephone are mentioned.

8 March 1878

 

“Examination of the Phonograph Record under the Microscope”, The Engineer

 

Persifor Frazer describes his examinations of phonograph traces made at the Franklin Institute.

24 May 1878

 

Edison's Phonograph

 

Edison’s tinfoil phonograph described in The Engineer

 

A description of a clockwork Edison phonograph from Paris.

21 June 1878

 

An illustration from The Illustrated London News

 

Shows hand-cranked and clockwork phonographs.  I do not have the associated text.

3 August 1878

 

Preece and Stroh: Vowel Sounds

 

“Studies in Acoustics.  On the Synthetic Examination of Vowel Sounds”

A paper presented to the Royal Society by W. H. Preece and Augustus Stroh

 

Preece and Stroh describe their ‘synthetic curve machine’ and ‘automatic phonograph’.  Helmholtz’s vowel theory is tested in practice.

27 February 1879

 

Charles Siemens and M. Hospitalier briefly demonstrate the

Lambrigot phonograph to the Society of Telegraph Engineers

 

The idea of engraving, rather than indenting, sounds appears promising.  Unfortunately, the demonstration is not a success.

9 April 1879

 

Handel Festival, Crystal Palace 1888

 

The Illustrated London News on Edison’s Perfected Phonograph

 

A brief account of the recording of the Handel Festival in the Crystal Palace, and Colonel Gouraud’s

communications with Edison via the phonograph.  The front page illustrations appear in many books.

14 July 1888

A brief description of the Perfected Phonograph, with another oft-seen illustration.    

21 July 1888

 

Graphophone Reproducer

 

“Engraving Sounds”, Edison’s Perfected Phonograph

and the Bell & Tainter Graphophone described in Engineering

 

A comprehensive description of the two competing machines.  Clicking on the illustrations will reveal more detail, including the name ‘Henry Edmunds’ on the cylinder box in Fig. 2.

14 September 1888

 

Emile Berliner's Improved Gramophone

Emile Berliner describes his Improved Gramophone to the

American Institute of Electrical Engineers

 

 The work of gradually bringing the gramophone up to the present state has been exceedingly tedious.  Working out telephones or transmitters is child's play in the face of the traps and Jack-o'-lanterns which beset the experiments with talking machines.  The size, form and material of the mouth-piece, the density, length and diameter of the speaking tube, the size, thickness and material of the diaphragms, the tension, temper and thickness of the springs, shape of the needle points, temperature of the room in which the discs are coated, the quality of the beeswax, the strength of the acid, and the method of manipulating the sounds of voices and of various instruments - all these gave rise to errors and pitfalls, which only continuous repetitions of whole series of tests could locate, avoid, or obliterate.”

16 December 1890

 

Edison's Phonograph

 

John Munro briefly describes Edison’s phonograph in The Story of Electricity

Published 1896

 

 

Some of the articles listed under ‘Telephony’ also deal with sound recording.  In ‘Researches in Electric Telephony’, Alexander Graham Bell describes his ‘ear’ phonautograph.  Bell also gives some traces of vowel sounds produced by a phonautograph at the Boston Institute of Technology.  Clarence Blake’s paper, ‘Sound in Relation to the Telephone’, also includes traces of vowel sounds.  Edison’s telephonograph is briefly described by G. B. Prescott in ‘Edison’s Acoustic and Telephonic Researches’. 

 

 

 

Telephony

 

From a 1902 text book by Phillip Reis’s biographer Silvanus P. Thompson:

 “The first successful attempt to transmit sounds electrically was made in 1861 by Reis, who succeeded in conveying musical and other tones by an imperfect telephone…  Reis transmitted speech with his instrument, but only imperfectly, for all tones of speech cannot be transmitted by abrupt interruptions of the current, to which Reis’s transmitter is prone when spoken into, owing to the extreme lightness of the contact:  they require gentle undulations, sometimes simple, sometimes complex, according to the nature of the sound.”

John Munro, in his 1883 paper on “New Telephone Transmitters”, claimed to have heard a Reis telephone transmit speech.  There were no such doubts about the final version of Bell’s telephone, the design of which was based on a continuously varying current.

 

 

A letter from Philipp Reis to William Ladd, reproduced in the Journal of the Society of Telegraph-Engineers and Electricians, 1883

 

Reis’s letter of the 13th July 1863 to William Ladd reveals that Ladd owned a Reis ‘telephon’.  Reis explains how to get the best results from the telephone, claiming that it can transmit ‘singing’ or ‘tunes’. 

13 July 1863

 

William Ladd describes an acoustic telegraph at a meeting of the

British Association for the Advancement of Science

 

The ‘acoustic telegraph’ Ladd describes is almost certainly his own Reis telephone. 

1863

 

Reis Telephone

 

From Electricity in the Service of Man

Early Telephones by Reis; Garnier and Pollard’s Singing Condenser; Janssens’s Telephone

Published 1886

 

The Wray Telephone, described by J. H. Pepper in Cyclopaedic Science Simplified

 

This telephone is similar to that of Reis.

Published 1877

 

 

Alexander Graham Bell’s Paper presented to the Society of Telegraph Engineers,

“Researches in Electric Telephony”, Parts  1,  2,  3,  4

Contributions from: Latimer Clark, W. H. Preece.

Researchers mentioned: Alexander Melville Bell, Ellis, Helmholtz, Varley, Gray, La Cour, Edison, Koenig, Maurey, Blake, Watson, Dolbear, Channing, Gower, du Moncel,

and many others

 

“Professor Alexander Graham Bell began his experiments upon the electrical transmission of sounds in October 1872.  On June 2, 1875, he transmitted musical tones electrically, without a battery.  Success came in July 1875 when he tried a membrane to which was attached an iron armature free to vibrate near a magnet.  Within a few months he patented his invention, and in January 1876 he sailed for Europe.  A demonstration of his telephone was given on July 12, 1876, at Boston (Mass.), in the presence of Sir William Thomson, upon whom the instrument employed in the demonstration was bestowed as a memento.  This instrument was exhibited by Thomson on the occasion of his address to the British Association in Glasgow, reported in Engineering on September 15, 1876, and December 22, 1876.  On October 31, 1877, The Society of Telegraph Engineers was honoured by a visit from Professor Alexander Graham Bell, who described his researches in a discourse sparkling with inspiration and delight.”

From ‘The History of the Institution of Electrical Engineers (1871-1931)’ (IEE Publication, 1939)

31 October 1877

 

Edison’s and Phelps’s telephones, compared in The Engineer

 

In an article reprinted from the Philadelphia Times, Edison’s carbon telephone proves to be superior to Phelps’s magneto telephone in tests between Philadelphia and New York.

26 April 1878

 

Clarence Blake Phonautograph Traces

 

Dr Clarence Blake’s Paper presented to the Society of Telegraph Engineers,

“Sound in Relation to the Telephone”

 

Blake describes the anatomy of  the ear and the design of Bell’s ‘ear’ phonautograph.  He also mentions various experiments using König’s Rods, manometric flames and Barlow’s Logograph.

8 May 1878

 

“On the Physical Action of the Microphone”

Professor David Hughes’s paper presented to the Physical Society in 1878,

republished in the Journal of the Society of Telegraph-Engineers and Electricians, 1883

 

“Professor D. E. Hughes was a great inventor, as shown by his printing telegraph, his invention of the microphone, and of other instruments, such as the induction balance and sonometer.  He very nearly anticipated some of the discoveries which led to wireless telegraphy.  He was also a charming companion and a most genial man.  At his death he left funds for the endowment of several science scholarships and for the donation annually of gold and silver medals and a premium by the Royal Society of London for electrical discoveries and inventions, irrespective of nationality or sex.”

From ‘Fifty Years of Electricity’ by J. A. Fleming (The Wireless Press, 1921)

1878

 

David Hughes's Microphone

 

Professor David Hughes’s microphone, described in The Engineer

17 May 1878

 

Cox Walker Octuple Microphone

 

Cox Walker’s octuple telephone, described in The Engineer

16 August 1878

 

Theodore Wiesendanger's Thermophone

 

Theodore Wiesendanger’s thermophone, described in The Engineer

8 November 1878

 

Edison Telephones

 

“Edison’s Acoustic and Telephonic Researches”,

described by G. B. Prescott in The Engineer

 

Miscellaneous variable resistance telephones - Experiments with carbon buttons

29 November 1878

Various microphones - Short-circuiting telephones

6 December 1878

Condenser telephones - Mercury globule telephones - Voltaic pile telephone

Telephonograph - Motograph - Tasimeter - Aerophone

13 December 1878

 

Gower telephone

 

“Recent Improvements in Professor Bell’s Telephone”

A paper by Adam Scott presented to the Society of Telegraph Engineers.

Contributions from: W. H. Preece, C. E. Webber, Lord Lindsay, W. E. Ayrton, E. A. Cowper.

Researchers mentioned: Bell, Gower, Siemens, St. George, Wilmot, Woollaston,

Hughes, du Moncel, Tyndall, Edison, Ader, Perry, Clark

 

Adam Scott describes Frederick Gower’s telephone.  The efficiency of telephones currently in use is also discussed.  W. H. Preece makes his famous, but often misquoted, comments on the usefulness of the telephone:

 

“One thing which strikes one in America is the enormous extent to which they apply the telegraph and the telephone for their own domestic purposes.  In Chicago, where there are from 7,000 to 8,000 calls daily, there is scarcely a house which has not in its hall a call-bell, by which you may despatch a message for a doctor, or a porter, or anything else you want, and the reason they are driven to that is - necessity being the mother of invention - that it acts as a substitute for servants.  Here we have no difficulty in getting servants if we pay them, but the difficulty in America is to get "buttons" at any price to run about for you as in England, and the result is the absence of servants has to a certain extent compelled the Americans to adopt this system of telegraphy for their own domestic purposes, and the telephone is to be found in almost every house as the only available substitute for the old system.”

 

“Few have worked at the telephone much more than I have.  I have one in my office, but more for show I as I do not use it because I do not want it.  If I want to send a message to another room, I use a sounder or employ a boy to take it; and I have no doubt that is the case with many others, and that probably is the reason why the telephone has not been more adopted here.”

23 April 1879

 

Research by Ayers, Beckmayer, Dumont, Geyer, du Moncel, Morton

mentioned in the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers

 

The Institution of Civil Engineers was the parent Institution of the Society of Telegraph Engineers.  At its foundation in 1871, and for the next 25 years, the Society used the Civil Engineers’ lecture theatre in Great George Street, Westminster.  

1878 - 1879

 

Alfred Niaudet Illustration

 

“Téléphone de Bell – Emploi de l’instrument”

From Alfred Niaudet’s Téléphones et Phonographes

Published approx. 1885

 

From Electricity in the Service of Man

Illustrations of telephones by Ader, Bottcher, D’Arsonval, Fein, Gray;

Phelps’s Crown and Ponny telephones; Boudet’s Miophone and Sphygmophone

 

Telephones by Bell, Gray, Berliner and Hughes

Telephones of Special Construction by Ader, Breguet, Edison, Dunand,

Dolbear, Pisko, Preece

 

Boudet's Telephone

 

Battery Telephones and Microphones by Berliner, Blake, Boudet, Crossley, Edison, Gower, Heller, Righi; Ader’s electrophone; Locht-Labye’s pantelephone; Wreden’s phonophore

Published 1886

 

“Some Recent Advances in Telephony”

A paper by Thomas D. Lockwood presented to the American Institute of Electrical Engineers

 

Subjects covered include long-range telephony; developments in carbon granule transmitters; the reduction of ‘cross-talk’.

19 May 1886

 

From The Theory of Sound  by Lord Rayleigh (John William Strutt).

Bell’s telephone; Push and pull theory; Experiment upon bipolar telephone;

Minimum current audible; Microphone

Published 1894

 

John Munro briefly describes a typical telephone in The Story of Electricity

Published 1896

 

 

Cassell's Book of Sports and Pastimes

‘Cassell’s Book of Sports and Pastimes’, published by Cassell approx. 1885

 

 

 

Frederick Gower demonstrates his Telephone Harp to the Society of Telegraph Engineers

 

Gower’s Telephone Harp was a musical instrument, complete with sound-to-light! 

8 May 1878

 

Phoneidoscope

 

Henry Edmunds jun.’s phonoscope and Sedley Taylor’s phoneidoscope,

described in The Engineer

 

The phonoscope and phoneidoscope produced visual representations of sounds.

The phonoscope was used by W. H. Preece in his lecture on the phonograph to the Society of Telegraph Engineers, February 1878.

14 June 1878

 

 

David Hughes's Microphone

Hughes’s Microphone, from ‘Electricity and Magnetism’ (Published by Macmillan, 1881)

 

The carbon microphone, and its brother the metallic microphone, were the subject of much discussion at the meetings of the Society of Telegraph-Engineers and Electricians in 1883.  Although both types of microphone had been invented five years earlier, there was still great debate on how they actually worked.

 

 

John Munro's Metallic Microphone

 

“New Telephone Transmitters”

J. Munro describes his metallic microphones

8 March 1883

 

Augustus Stroh's Microphonic Apparatus

 

J. Munro’s Supplementary Note on the Action of the Microphone.

Contributions from: Prof. D. E. Hughes, W. H. Preece, A. Stroh, Prof. W. E. Ayrton,

B. Warwick, Prof. W. Grylls Adams, Walter H. Coffin.

Researchers mentioned:  Varley, Blyth, Bidwell, Ader, De la Rue, Stokes, Faraday, Perry, Brook

8 March 1883

 

Shelford Bidwell's Microphone 

 

“On Microphonic Contacts”

An extract from Shelford Bidwell’s paper.

Researchers mentioned:  du Moncel, Clerac, Hughes, Stroh, Edison, Preece, Munro, Boudet

12 April 1883

 

“Note on the Influence of Surface-Condensed Gas upon the Action of the Microphone”

A paper by I. Probert and Alfred W. Soward.

 

Augustus Stroh's Microphone Microscope

 

Augustus Stroh describes his microphone microscope

12 April 1883

 

Discussion on the Action of the Microphone.

Contributions from:  Prof. Silvanus P. Thompson, Prof. D. E. Hughes, Prof. W. E. Ayrton,

J. Munro, J. J. Fahie, W. H. Mordey, Willoughby Smith, Shelford Bidwell.

Researchers mentioned:  du Moncel, Clerac, Warwick, Anders, Theiler, Blake,

Reis, Ochorwiz, Wheatstone, Stroh, De la Rue, Perry, Müller, Varley

26 April 1883

 

 “On the Physical Action of the Microphone”

A republication of Professor David Hughes’s paper presented to the Physical Society in 1878

26 April 1883

 

W. Moon describes his Static Induction Telephone

26 April 1883

 

 

 

 

The Sound of a Voice Postcard

 

I borrowed the name “The Sound of a Voice” from this postcard.  The card doesn’t really belong here, as it was posted in 1907, years after the most recent article listed on this page.  It’s still a nice picture.  I think the phonograph is a Columbia.

 

Before you go, take a look at (and have a listen to) my 'Trottophone' Phonograph.

 

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