[78-L] Earliest born to record (was Engraved records)

Bud Black banjobud at cfl.rr.com
Tue Oct 14 16:54:09 PDT 2008


Didn't P.T. Barnum cut a cylinder for Edison?  And didn't Edwin Booth?

Bud 
 
-------Original Message-------
 
From: Chris Zwarg
Date: 10/14/2008 2:26:44 PM
To: 78-L Mail List
Subject: Re: [78-L] Earliest born to record (was Engraved records)
 
At 20:14 14.10.2008, you wrote:
>DAVID BURNHAM wrote:
>
>> I just came across an interesting record.  It's a speech by Leo Tolstoy./
>> snip/
>> Since Tolstoy was born in 1828, this is probably the oldest recorded
>> person I have on
>> records, (he shared the planet with Schubert, Mendelssohn, Chopin,
>> Schumann, etc).
>> Previously the oldest one I knew of was Josef Joachim, but he was three
>> years younger.
>----
>Mike Biel has pointed out that Hungarian politician Lajos Kossuth, born
>1802, was the oldest.
 
I still think that Tolstoy is the earliest-born person who made a
*commercially issued* record (the 1909 HMVs of which David has one).
 
Chris Zwarg
 
>Here's from Wikipedia:
>
>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lajos_Kossuth
>
>> 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.
>
>And here's the voice:
>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_SBwVB83WU
>
>Kristjan
>
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