1919
Talking Machine Rouses Woman After Human Voices Fail.
NORWICH, N. Y. — Neighbors, relatives and doctors for eighty days had tried to wake Mrs. Fred Tracey, 55, of Oxford, from her "sleeping sickness," but a talking machine succeeded where human voices had failed.
When, as a last resort, a record was played she became conscious long enough to inquire:
"What was that?"
Then she fell asleep again, but was roused several times after that. Her physician now states she will recover.
Friday, April 4, 2008
Music Ends 80-Day Sleep
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
The Kaiser's Voice
1906
His Words Preserved on First Permanent Roll in Phonetic Archives
One of the novelties of the last few years is the establishment of phonetic archives, in which the voices of noteworthy persons are to be preserved.
The first record actually taken for such a permanent archive in America was that of a European. Through the American Ambassador Charlemagne Tower, I applied for a "record of the voice of the German emperor, for preservation in durable material in Harvard University, the National Museum at Washington, and the Library of Congress at Washington. The record is to be kept as a historical document for posterity. The Phonetic Archives at the institutions mentioned are to include records from such persons as will presumably have permanent historical interest for America. The importance of the undertaking can be estimated by considering the present value of voice records by Demosthenes, Shakespeare, or Emperor William the Great."
The Emperor consented, and the apparatus was set up in the palace. I asked for four records, one for each of the institutions mentioned and one for my own scientific investigation. The Emperor, however, made only two records, designating one for Harvard University and the other for other purposes. The two records were made by a phonograph (with specially selected recorders) on wax cylinders. Such cylinders are of no permanent value, because they are often injured by mold, and sooner or later they always crack, owing to changes in temperature.
From each original "master record" a metal matrix was made by coating it with graphite and then galvanoplating it. The wax master record was then removed (being destroyed in the process), leaving a mold from which "positives" — that is copies of the original — could be cast in a hard shellac composition and in celluloid. Some casts were also made in wax, and new metal matrices were made from these. In this manner the following material was obtained: (1) A metal matrix and positive of Record No. 1, deposited in the National Museum at Washington; (2) a similar set of Record No. 1, deposited in the Congressional Library at Washington; (3) a similar set of Record No. 2, deposited in Harvard University; (4) a complete set for both records (a metal matrix and a positive of each), which I presented to the Emperor; and (5) a reserve set of both. These are the only records of the German Emperor's voice which exist at the present time. — The Century.