Review: Centuries of Sound

Two decades before phonographs existed, Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville invented a machine for transcribing sounds onto paper. This wasn't meant as a playback device, but scientists eventually managed to transmute those transcriptions back into audio again. The resulting recording is "far indeed from easy listening," blogger James Errington warns us. Instead, it's "slightly tuned white noise, through which you can hear something; not enough to really make out much, but unmistakably a human voice."
That muffled voice, captured singing "Au Clair de la Lune" in 1860, can be heard in the first installment of Errington's Centuries of Sound project.
The basic concept is simple: Every month, Errington posts a mix of recordings from a different year. Each DJ set comes with an essay offering some context for what we're hearing—and, sometimes just as important, what we're not hearing. If a form of music is emerging but hasn't made its way onto record yet (as happened, say, when jazz first appeared), we can read about it even if we can't listen to it.
The earliest mixes are short, essentially incomprehensible, and sometimes drawn from more than one year at a time. (Recordings in the mid-19th century were scarce, after all.) But soon we're getting a rich diet of arias, brass bands, minstrel songs, presidential speeches, vaudeville routines, and global selections from Russia to Quebec. We even get dirty jokes: Comedians started pressing them onto wax cylinders in the 1890s, sparking America's first crusade to censor indecent recordings.
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Given that this is a Jesse Walker article, I was expecting this to turn into a celebration of The First Black Recording Artist or some such. To my relief, I won't have to claw out my eyes this morning. When can we expect the other shoe to drop?
Jesse Walker likes black people? Ew, gross! Thanks for the warning!
All That Scratchin' Is Making Me Itch
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ncatNVKsmXI
More seriously, the LOC, which generally does a terrible job with these things, used to post audio from the 1890s, including "comedy" cylinders. The accents (everything was country boy v. city slickers back then) are pretty much incomprehensible, as are the jokes, except for one:
City Slicker: Does a man with one eye named Johnson live on this street?
Country Boy: What's the name of his other eye?
Cue the Mr. Show sketch about the purist who can only listen to music on Victrola because MP3's, magnetic media or vinyl wasn't pure enough.