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1877 Thomas Alva Edison, working in his lab,
succeeds in recovering Mary's Little Lamb from a strip of tinfoil wrapped around a spinning cylinder.
He demonstrates his invention in the offices of Scientific American, and the phonograph is born.
1881 Clement Ader, using carbon microphones and
armature headphones, accidentally produces a stereo effect when listeners outside the hall monitor adjacent telephone lines linked to stage mikes at the Paris Opera
1887 Emile Berliner is granted a patent on a flat-
disc gramophone, making the production of multiple copies practical.
1895 Marconi successfully experiments with his
wireless telegraph system in Italy, leading to the first transatlantic signals from Poldhu, Cornwall, UK to St. John's, Newfoundland in 1901.
1900 Poulsen unveils his invention to the public at
the Paris Exposition. Austria's Emperor Franz Josef records his congratulations.
Boston's Symphony Hall opens with the benefit of Wallace Clement Sabine's acoustical advice
1901 The Victor Talking Machine Company is
founded by Emile Berliner and Eldridge Johnson.
Experimental optical recordings are made on motion picture film.
1912 Major Edwin F. Armstrong is issued a patent
for a regenerative circuit, making radio reception practical.
1913 The first "talking movie" is demonstrated by
Edison using his Kinetophone process, a cylinder player mechanically synchronized to a film projector.
1916 A patent for the super heterodyne circuit is
issued to Armstrong. The Society of Motion Picture Engineers
(SMPE) is formed. Edison does live-versus-recorded
demonstrations in Carnegie Hall, NYC.
1917 The Scully disk recording lathe is introduced. E. C. Wente of Bell Telephone Laboratories
publishes a paper in Physical Review describing a "uniformly sensitive instrument for the absolute measurement of sound intensity" -- the condenser microphone.
1925 Bell Labs develops a moving armature lateral
cutting system for electrical recording on disk. Concurrently they Introduce the Victor Orthohombic Victrola, "Credenza" model. This all-acoustic player with no electronics is considered a leap forward in phonograph design.
The first electrically recorded 78 rpm disks appear.
RCA works on the development of ribbon microphones.
1927 "The Jazz Singer" is released as the first
commercial talking picture, using Vitaphone sound on disks synchronized with film.
The Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) is formed.
The Japan Victor Corporation (JVC) is formed as a subsidiary of the Victor Talking Machine Co.
1928 Dr. Harold Black at Bell Labs applies for a
patent on the principle of negative feedback. It is granted nine years later.
Dr. Georg Neumann founds a company in Germany to manufacture his condenser microphones. Its first product is the Model CMV 3.
1929 Harry Nyquist publishes the mathematical
foundation for the sampling theorem basic to all digital audio processing, the "Nyquist Theorem."
The "Blattnerphone" is developed for use as a magnetic recorder using steel tape.
1931 Alan Blumlein, working for Electrical and
Musical Industries (EMI) in London, in effect patents stereo. His seminal patent discusses the theory of stereo, both describing and picturing in the course of its 70-odd individual claims a coincident crossed-eights miking arrangement and a "45-45" cutting system for stereo disks.
Arthur Keller and associates at Bell Labs in New York experiment with a vertical-lateral stereo disk cutter.
1932 The first cardioids ribbon microphone is
patented by Dr. Harry F. Olson of RCA, using a field coil instead of a permanent magnet.
1933 Magnetic recording on steel wire is
developed commercially. Snow, Fletcher, and Steinberg at Bell Labs
transmit the first inter-city stereo audio program.
1935 AEG (Germany) exhibits its "Magnetophon"
Model K-1 at the Berlin Radio Exposition. BASF prepares the first plastic-based
magnetic tapes.
1936 BASF makes the first tape recording of a
symphony concert during a visit by the touring London Philharmonic Orchestra. Sir Thomas Beecham conducts Mozart.
Von Braunmühl and Weber apply for a patent on the cardioids condenser microphone.
1938 Benjamin B. Bauer of Shure Bros. engineers a
single microphone element to produce a cardioids pickup pattern, called the Undine, Model 55. This later becomes the basis for the well known SM57 and SM58 microphones.
Under the direction of Dr. Harry Olson, Leslie J. Anderson designs the 44B ribbon bidirectional microphone and the 77B ribbon unidirectional for RCA.
RCA develops the first column loudspeaker array.
1939 Independently, engineers in Germany, Japan
and the U.S. discover and develop AC biasing for magnetic recording.
Western Electric designs the first motional feedback, vertical-cut disk recording head.
Major Armstrong, the inventor of FM radio, makes the first experimental FM broadcast.
The first of many attempts is made to define a standard for the VU meter.
1941 Commercial FM broadcasting begins in the
U.S. Arthur Haddy of English Decca devises the
first motional feedback, lateral-cut disk recording head, later used to cut their "ffrr" high-fidelity recordings.
1942 The RCA LC-1 loudspeaker is developed as a
reference-standard control-room monitor. Dr. Olson patents a single-ribbon cardioids
microphone (later developed as the RCA 77D and 77DX), and a "phased-array" directional microphone.
The first stereo tape recordings are made by Helmut Kruger at German Radio in Berlin.
1945 Two Magnetophon tape decks are sent back
to the U.S. In pieces in multiple mailbags by Army Signal Corps Major John T. (Jack) Mullin.
1946 Webster-Chicago manufactures wire
recorders for the home market. Brush Development Corp. builds a
semiprofessional tape recorder as its Model BK401 Sound mirror.
3M introduces Scotch No. 100, a black oxide paper tape.
Jack Mullin demonstrates "hi-fi" tape recording with his reconstructed Magnetophon at an Institute of Radio Engineers (IRE) meeting in San Francisco.
1947 Colonel Richard Ranger begins to manufacture his
version of a Magnetophon. Bing Crosby and his technical director, Murdo
McKenzie, agree to audition tape recorders brought in by Jack Mullin and Richard Ranger. Mullin's is preferred, and he is brought back to record Crosby's Philco radio show.
Ampex produces its first tape recorder, the Model 200. Major improvements are made in disk-cutting
technology: the Presto 1D, Fairchild 542, and Cook feedback cutters.
The Williamson high-fidelity power amplifier circuit is published.
The first issue of Audio Engineering is published; its name is later shortened to Audio.
1948 The Audio Engineering Society (AES) is
formed in New York City. The microgroove 33-1/3 rpm long-play vinyl
record (LP) is introduced by Columbia Records.
Scotch types 111 and 112 acetate-base tapes are introduced.
Magnecord introduces its PT-6, the first tape recorder in portable cases.
1949 RCA introduces the microgroove 45 rpm,
large-hole, 7-inch record and record changer/adaptor.
Ampex introduces its Model 300 professional studio recorder.
Magnecord produces the first U.S.-made stereo tape recorder, employing half-track staggered-head assemblies.
A novel amplifier design is described by McIntosh and Gow.
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