Re: [Phono-L] Early European Edison Phonograph Recordings Released/ECR

2012-02-01 Thread AllenAmet
Hi Art,
 
  The book, 'ECR, 1889-1912' contains a variety of  detailed material 
pertaining to Edison (US) record production in those  years. It contains all 
the 
regular brown wax cylinders (post-1897), i.e.  until they were discontinued 
on July 25, 1902. It also lists and dates the  Concert series (5 dia), as 
they appeared (they were available on special order  until 1907).
 
  Black wax moulded cylinders began to appear at the end of 1901, and  the 
last new titles were issued in 1912 (production to 1914); they are  all 
listed chronologically, by catalog #, by artist, AND title.
 
  The 2nd edition of ECR also contains Edison's 4-min wax Amberol  series 
(popular and operatic) - month by month, and the book has about 212 pages  - 
Amazon for some reason declined to count the (many) pages with Roman  
numerals.
 
  Oh, and starting on p. 109, we see the specific contents of  'The First 
Book of Phonograph Records' - as kept by A Theo E Wangemann between  
1889-1892. This is a remarkable compilation (instrumental and vocal), 
maintained  
day by day, with all recording personnel and notes. It does not include  
Wangemann's European trip per se, with its unique recording of Bismarck, altho  
it states that ATEW left for Paris on June 15, 1889. If I recall, one of  
Wangemann's assistants was V. H. Emerson and one sees this homage in the naming 
 of one of Emerson's own children. The death of Wangemann occurred in 1906 
under  some unusual circumstances.
 
  We still have of few of the 2nd editions left, which are listed at:  
_www.phonobooks.com_ (http://www.phonobooks.com)  - enjoy!
 
Best
Allen

 In a message dated 1/31/2012 9:54:57 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
aph4...@aol.com writes:

So  Allen,
How do I tell which cylinders are Wangemann's in the ECR?  Or  are all  the 
early cylinders his production?
 
___
Phono-L mailing list
http://phono-l.org


Re: [Phono-L] Early European Edison Phonograph Recordings Released/ECR

2012-02-01 Thread Aph4990
Thanks Allan,
That resource gets better and better if one knows where to look.
--Art
 
 
In a message dated 2/1/2012 11:21:52 A.M. Mountain Standard Time,  
allena...@aol.com writes:

Hi  Art,

The book, 'ECR, 1889-1912' contains a variety of   detailed material 
pertaining to Edison (US) record production in  those  years. It contains 
all the 
regular brown wax cylinders  (post-1897), i.e.  until they were 
discontinued 
on July 25, 1902. It  also lists and dates the  Concert series (5 dia), as 
they appeared  (they were available on special order  until 1907).

Black  wax moulded cylinders began to appear at the end of 1901, and  the  
last new titles were issued in 1912 (production to 1914); they are   all 
listed chronologically, by catalog #, by artist, AND  title.

The 2nd edition of ECR also contains Edison's 4-min wax  Amberol  series 
(popular and operatic) - month by month, and the book  has about 212 pages  
- 
Amazon for some reason declined to count the  (many) pages with Roman  
numerals.

Oh, and starting on  p. 109, we see the specific contents of  'The First 
Book of  Phonograph Records' - as kept by A Theo E Wangemann between   
1889-1892. This is a remarkable compilation (instrumental and vocal),  
maintained  
day by day, with all recording personnel and notes. It  does not include  
Wangemann's European trip per se, with its unique  recording of Bismarck, 
altho  
it states that ATEW left for Paris on  June 15, 1889. If I recall, one of  
Wangemann's assistants was V. H.  Emerson and one sees this homage in the 
naming 
of one of Emerson's own  children. The death of Wangemann occurred in 1906 
under  some unusual  circumstances.

We still have of few of the 2nd editions left,  which are listed at:  
_www.phonobooks.com_  (http://www.phonobooks.com)  -  enjoy!

Best
Allen

In a message dated  1/31/2012 9:54:57 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
aph4...@aol.com  writes:

So  Allen,
How do I tell which cylinders are  Wangemann's in the ECR?  Or  are all  
the 
early cylinders  his  production?

___
Phono-L  mailing  list
http://phono-l.org

___
Phono-L mailing list
http://phono-l.org


Re: [Phono-L] Early European Edison Phonograph Recordings Released

2012-01-31 Thread Ron Cowen
and here is NYT story on the findings 
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/31/science/bismarcks-voice-among-restored-edison-recordings.html
On Jan 30, 2012, at 10:03 PM, DanKj wrote:

 
 - Original Message - From: gerald_fab...@nps.gov
 To: theresa_j...@nps.gov
 Sent: Monday, January 30, 2012 8:20 PM
 Subject: [phonolist] Early European Edison Phonograph Recordings Released
 
 
 
 Thomas Edison NHP News Release
 
 
 
 
 
 For Release: Monday January 30, 2012
 Contact: Jerry Fabris
 Phone: 973-736-0550 x48
 
Early European Edison Phonograph Recordings Released
 
  WEST ORANGE, NJ – Today the National Park Service announces the first-time 
 release of 12
 
  historic sound recordings made by Thomas Edison’s recording engineer Theo 
 Wangemann on
 
  wax cylinders during 1889-1890 in Germany, Austria, Prussia, and France. 
 The recordings
 
  include the voices of eminent German historical figures Otto von Bismarck 
 and Helmuth
 
  von Moltke, and several performances by important musicians of the period. 
 The sounds
 
  are available on-line in MP3-format at:
 
 http://www.nps.gov/edis/photosmultimedia/theo-wangemann-1889-1890-european-recordings.ht
 
  m.
 
 
 
  On Saturday, February 4, 2012 at 12:00 noon, historian Patrick Feaster, 
 will present a
 
  one-hour program about the recordings, titled Theo Wangemann: The Man Who 
 Made the
 
  Phonograph Musical. This presentation will explore the life and career of 
 Theo
 
  Wangemann, who was arguably the world’s first professional recording 
 engineer. Also at
 
  the program, collector Stuart H. Miller, M.D. will exhibit the phonograph 
 used by
 
  Wangemann in Europe during 1889-1890. The program will be held in the 
 Laboratory Complex
 
  at Thomas Edison National Historical Park, 211 Main Street. The entrance 
 fee to the park
 
  is $7.00, children under 16 are free.  Seating is limited and reservations 
 are required.
 
  Reservations can be made by calling 973-736-0550, ext. 89.
 
 
  Museum Curators first cataloged the damaged wooden box containing the wax 
 cylinders in
  1957, found in the library of the Edison Laboratory.  In 2005, the National 
 Park Service
  completed a multi-year project to individually catalog every historic sound 
 recording in
  the museum collection. Curators noted that the box contained 17 brown wax 
 cylinders in
  fair and poor condition, several broken with large pieces missing.  No 
 title list or
  other identification survived in the box with the recordings, so the 
 recordings could
  not be identified until they were heard.  In 2011, the park's Curator of 
 Sound
  Recordings digitized 12 of Wangemann's 17 cylinders using a French-made 
 Archeophone
  cylinder playback machine, saving the audio as Broadcast Wave Format files. 
 (Five of the
  cylinders could not be digitized due to their condition.)  Once the audio 
 could be
  heard, historians Stephan Puille and Patrick Feaster identified the sounds 
 and wrote two
  scholarly essays, which are included with the recordings on the Thomas 
 Edison National
  Historical Park website.
 
  Entrusted by Thomas Edison with the task of applying the newly developed 
 wax cylinder
  phonograph to music, Theo Wangemann oversaw the first regular production of 
 pre-recorded
  cylinders at the Edison Laboratory in West Orange, New Jersey in 1888-89, 
 ushering in
  the beginnings of the American musical recording industry.  Then, in 
 1889-90, Wangemann
  played a prominent role in introducing Edison’s invention to continental 
 Europe.
 
 
  ---
 
  Stephan Puille is a conservator of archaeological finds and technical 
 employee at the
  Hochschule für Technik und Wirtschaft Berlin (HTW Berlin) - University of 
 Applied
  Sciences.  For more than ten years he studies the history of sound 
 recording from the
  beginning up to 1914, holds lectures and writes articles on the subject. In 
 addition, he
  is a phonograph and phonogram collector who concentrates on early and 
 historically
  significant items. Contact: Stephan Puille, Hochschule für Technik und 
 Wirtschaft
  Berlin, Wilhelminenhofstraße 75A, 12459 Berlin, Germany.  E-mail:
  stephan.pui...@htw-berlin.de
 
  Patrick Feaster (pfeas...@gmail.com, 812-331-0047) is a researcher and 
 educator
  specializing in the history and culture of sound media.  A co-founder of 
 FirstSounds.org
  and two-time Grammy nominee, he received his doctorate in Folklore and 
 Ethnomusicology
  in 2007 from Indiana University Bloomington, where he is currently a 
 lecturer in the
  Department of Communication and Culture, a member of the Media Preservation 
 Initiative,
  and an instructor for the School of Continuing Studies.
 
  Thomas Edison National Historical Park is a National Park Service site 
 dedicated to
  promoting an international understanding and appreciation of the life and 
 extraordinary
  achievements of Thomas Alva Edison by preserving, protecting, and 
 

Re: [Phono-L] Early European Edison Phonograph Recordings Released

2012-01-31 Thread AllenAmet
Is ATEW's middle name really Theodor - I have always seen it as  just 
Theo on old original documents.
 
  Seriously though, a great article in the NYT! Interested collectors  can 
also see Wangemann's early output of cylinders for Edison (day by  day) in 
'ECR, 1889-1912.'
 
Allen

 
In a message dated 1/31/2012 9:04:27 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
roncow...@gmail.com writes:

and here  is NYT story on the findings  
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/31/science/bismarcks-voice-among-restored-edison-recordings.html
 
___
Phono-L mailing list
http://phono-l.org


Re: [Phono-L] Early European Edison Phonograph Recordings Released

2012-01-31 Thread Aph4990
So Allen,
How do I tell which cylinders are Wangemann's in the ECR?  Or are all  the 
early cylinders his production?
--Art Heller
 
 
In a message dated 1/31/2012 11:14:40 A.M. Mountain Standard Time,  
allena...@aol.com writes:


Seriously though, a great article in the NYT! Interested  collectors  can 
also see Wangemann's early output of cylinders for  Edison (day by  day) in 
'ECR,  1889-1912.'

Allen
___
Phono-L mailing list
http://phono-l.org


[Phono-L] Early European Edison Phonograph Recordings Released

2012-01-30 Thread DanKj


- Original Message - 
From: gerald_fab...@nps.gov

To: theresa_j...@nps.gov
Sent: Monday, January 30, 2012 8:20 PM
Subject: [phonolist] Early European Edison Phonograph Recordings Released




Thomas Edison NHP News Release





For Release: Monday January 30, 2012
Contact: Jerry Fabris
Phone: 973-736-0550 x48

Early European Edison Phonograph Recordings Released

  WEST ORANGE, NJ – Today the National Park Service announces the 
first-time release of 12


  historic sound recordings made by Thomas Edison’s recording engineer 
Theo Wangemann on


  wax cylinders during 1889-1890 in Germany, Austria, Prussia, and France. 
The recordings


  include the voices of eminent German historical figures Otto von 
Bismarck and Helmuth


  von Moltke, and several performances by important musicians of the 
period. The sounds


  are available on-line in MP3-format at:


http://www.nps.gov/edis/photosmultimedia/theo-wangemann-1889-1890-european-recordings.ht

  m.



  On Saturday, February 4, 2012 at 12:00 noon, historian Patrick Feaster, 
will present a


  one-hour program about the recordings, titled Theo Wangemann: The Man 
Who Made the


  Phonograph Musical. This presentation will explore the life and career 
of Theo


  Wangemann, who was arguably the world’s first professional recording 
engineer. Also at


  the program, collector Stuart H. Miller, M.D. will exhibit the 
phonograph used by


  Wangemann in Europe during 1889-1890. The program will be held in the 
Laboratory Complex


  at Thomas Edison National Historical Park, 211 Main Street. The entrance 
fee to the park


  is $7.00, children under 16 are free.  Seating is limited and 
reservations are required.


  Reservations can be made by calling 973-736-0550, ext. 89.


  Museum Curators first cataloged the damaged wooden box containing the 
wax cylinders in
  1957, found in the library of the Edison Laboratory.  In 2005, the 
National Park Service
  completed a multi-year project to individually catalog every historic 
sound recording in
  the museum collection. Curators noted that the box contained 17 brown 
wax cylinders in
  fair and poor condition, several broken with large pieces missing.  No 
title list or
  other identification survived in the box with the recordings, so the 
recordings could
  not be identified until they were heard.  In 2011, the park's Curator of 
Sound
  Recordings digitized 12 of Wangemann's 17 cylinders using a French-made 
Archeophone
  cylinder playback machine, saving the audio as Broadcast Wave Format 
files. (Five of the
  cylinders could not be digitized due to their condition.)  Once the 
audio could be
  heard, historians Stephan Puille and Patrick Feaster identified the 
sounds and wrote two
  scholarly essays, which are included with the recordings on the Thomas 
Edison National

  Historical Park website.

  Entrusted by Thomas Edison with the task of applying the newly developed 
wax cylinder
  phonograph to music, Theo Wangemann oversaw the first regular production 
of pre-recorded
  cylinders at the Edison Laboratory in West Orange, New Jersey in 
1888-89, ushering in
  the beginnings of the American musical recording industry.  Then, in 
1889-90, Wangemann
  played a prominent role in introducing Edison’s invention to continental 
Europe.



  ---

  Stephan Puille is a conservator of archaeological finds and technical 
employee at the
  Hochschule für Technik und Wirtschaft Berlin (HTW Berlin) - University 
of Applied
  Sciences.  For more than ten years he studies the history of sound 
recording from the
  beginning up to 1914, holds lectures and writes articles on the subject. 
In addition, he
  is a phonograph and phonogram collector who concentrates on early and 
historically
  significant items. Contact: Stephan Puille, Hochschule für Technik und 
Wirtschaft

  Berlin, Wilhelminenhofstraße 75A, 12459 Berlin, Germany.  E-mail:
  stephan.pui...@htw-berlin.de

  Patrick Feaster (pfeas...@gmail.com, 812-331-0047) is a researcher and 
educator
  specializing in the history and culture of sound media.  A co-founder of 
FirstSounds.org
  and two-time Grammy nominee, he received his doctorate in Folklore and 
Ethnomusicology
  in 2007 from Indiana University Bloomington, where he is currently a 
lecturer in the
  Department of Communication and Culture, a member of the Media 
Preservation Initiative,

  and an instructor for the School of Continuing Studies.

  Thomas Edison National Historical Park is a National Park Service site 
dedicated to
  promoting an international understanding and appreciation of the life 
and extraordinary
  achievements of Thomas Alva Edison by preserving, protecting, and 
interpreting the
  Park’s extensive historic artifact and archive collections at the Edison 
Laboratory
  Complex and Glenmont, the Edison family estate.  The Visitor Center is 
located at 211
  Main Street in West Orange, New Jersey.  The Laboratory