The Phonautograph Recording from 1860 of 'Au Clair de la Lune' Sound restoration. The first known recording of a human voice, from April 9th, 1860. Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville.
whooooaaaah this is absolutely incredible,it,s just mind blowing,just amezing how it becomes possible to remaster this to such hich quality,by removing noise,hiss,cracks,falsh harmonics.
also this must,ve be very emotional since it was only recorded but never played till now,and recover something wich was hide by noise is just amezing.
now you can even change the keynote and use stereopanning echo to virtualy go back in time and change things up!!!!
Interesting, how the tried around 150 years ago.
DieterLo1 1 day ago
@kqr573v2
roflmfao
kimosabesun 1 week ago
The maker of this device went on to manufacture speaker systems for drive-through restaurants
kqr573v2 1 week ago 2
1-creepy
2-is that a violin?
vampyra123450 1 week ago
it,s amezing how to restore such terrible quality into clean audio.
if we just future improve it with stereo panning in echo and normal version and upsample it to 24bit audio for sacd,that would be top of the bill.
johneymute 1 week ago
whooooaaaah this is absolutely incredible,it,s just mind blowing,just amezing how it becomes possible to remaster this to such hich quality,by removing noise,hiss,cracks,falsh harmonics.
also this must,ve be very emotional since it was only recorded but never played till now,and recover something wich was hide by noise is just amezing.
now you can even change the keynote and use stereopanning echo to virtualy go back in time and change things up!!!!
johneymute 2 weeks ago
@CosmicCaprice It wasn't a woman, it was the inventor singing into it.
ss35523 2 weeks ago
the 1st one is better than justin beiber!
shaneyseano 2 weeks ago
you did your best to clear her voice, but it was obvious she was just a bad singer.
CosmicCaprice 2 weeks ago