Showing Original Post only (View all)
Opening Today: "Hear My Voice" at National Museum of American History [View all]
"Hear My Voice" at National Museum of American History
Arts & Entertainment : Picks
Monday, Jan. 26
By Tim Regan January 23, 2015
Most students of American history will remember that without telecommunications pioneer Alexander Graham Bell, the iPhone would never have been invented. But Bells trailblazing work in the field of sound recording is frequently overlooked. In the late 19th century, his D.C.-based Volta Laboratory invented the first method of capturing and playing back sounds. One of the first sounds the researchers recorded was Bells own voice, but those recordings were thought to be lostuntil recently, when researchers from Smithsonians National Museum of American History and the Library of Congress discovered a wax-on-binder-board disc inscribed with Grahams initials (pictured). Using a special sound recovery process developed at Californias Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, the historians made the disc audible to human ears. Now listeners can access those recordings in the museums new exhibition, Hear My Voice. Attendees can examine documents, recordings, laboratory notes, and equipment from the Volta Laboratory, plus listen to Bells until-recently unknown voice with their own ears. Though Bell spends most of his time on the disc reciting numbers and simple phrases, his work marked the first step toward our MP3-ruled world. The exhibition is on view daily 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. at the National Museum of American History, 14th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. Free. (202) 633-1000. americanhistory.si.edu.
Hear My Voice: Alexander Graham Bell and the Origins of Recorded Sound
January 26, 2015 to October 25, 2015
Second floor east

Alexander Graham Bell is best remembered as the inventor of the telephone, but he and his associates were also instrumental in the development of sound recording at his Volta Laboratory in Washington, D.C. In this exhibiton, see documents, recordings, laboratory notes, and apparatus from the Volta Laboratory dating from the 1880s; learn about the early history of sound recording in the United States; and hear some of the earliest sound recordings ever made. The recordings are made audible through a 21st century sound recovery technique developed by Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory staff in partnership with the Library of Congress and the Museum.
https://pmatep5f7b.execute-api.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/ProdStage