[78-L] Oldest living person to have made a 78?

Kristjan Saag saag at telia.com.invalid
Fri Jan 2 10:53:44 PST 2015


Earliest born person to record was probably Prussian military Helmuth 
Karl Bernhrad von Moltke whose voice 78 list members Stefan Puille and 
Patrick Feaster discovered on a cylinder a few years ago.
Here's an article about ir; the headlines boast of people born in the 
18th century, but Moltke, in fact, was born in 1800.
http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2012/01/edisons-files-reveal-the-only-known-voice-recording-of-someone-born-in-the-18th-century/252283/
Kristjan



On 2015-01-02 18:17, Malcolm Rockwell wrote:
>
> The researcher Helen Roberts recorded a female chanter on the island of
> Kauai who was almost 100 years old in 1928. That would make her birthday
> around 1830 and so probably the oldest known person to record. However,
> Roberts used an Edison cylinder recorder, which puts the artist out of
> the running for a disc 78.
> Without major diggage locating her name is problematic, but I will do so
> if there's any interest.
> Malcolm
>
> *******
>
> On 1/2/2015 6:57 AM, gdkimball at cox.net.invalid wrote:
>> I assume that it was only in retrospect that it became iconic. There had been many southern field sessions by 1927, so it wasn't a big deal at the time. Stoneman and some of the other participants had aleady made plenty of records. Atlanta might have a better claim as the "Birthplace of County Music" in terms of timing and volume of recordings.
>>
>> Gregg
>>
>>
>> ---- Rodger Holtin iPod <rjh334578 at gmail.com.invalid> wrote:
>>> That has been my thought, too.
>>>
>>> I am really impressed withthe writer.  No references to "vinyl" or
>>> "RCA" but did use "Orthophonic"!
>>>
>>> I have that record and often wondered about who all participated.
>>> There are a lot of churches in this part of the world - the American
>>> south - (I am in west Tennessee) that still sing just exactly like that.
>>>
>>> And now my question
>>> The story references Johnny Cash's acknowledgement of the Bristol
>>> sessions.  I know it got some publicity when it was current news but I
>>> have to wonder at what point was it known by scholars?  When was this
>>> known by the music fraternity?  Cash, of course, married into the
>>> family but was he or anybody else really aware of its significance
>>> prior to the Country Music Hall of Fame that really brought it to the
>>> fore?  Surely they wee just old records for a long time.
>>>
>>> Sent from my iPod - which explainz any bad typjng
>>>
>>>
>>> On Jan 2, 2015, at 7:06 AM, Kristjan Saag <saag at telia.com.invalid>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> I always thought there might turn up an acoustic recording with
>>>> childrens' voices, and some of the participants still alive. This was
>>>> pretty close.
>>>> Kristjan
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On 2015-01-02 06:37, David Lennick wrote:
>>>>> http://www.tricities.com/article_0d690b26-3385-11e4-8cbe-001a4bcf6878.html
>>>>>
>>>>> dl
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> 78-L mailing list
>>>>> 78-L at klickitat.78online.com
>>>>> http://klickitat.78online.com/mailman/listinfo/78-l
>>>>>
>>>>
>
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