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Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

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Page 1: Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

Audio TimelineBy: Eric Sutton

Teacher: Mr. Hardin

Page 2: Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

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.

Page 3: Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

1878 -1887

• 1878 The first music is put on record: cornetist Jules Levy plays "Yankee Doodle."

• 1888 Edison introduces an electric motor-driven phonograph

Page 4: Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

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

Page 5: Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

1887 -1888

• 1887 Emile Berliner is granted a patent on a flat-disc gramophone, making the production of multiple copies practical.

• 1888 Edison introduces an electric motor-driven phonograph.

Page 6: Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

1895

• Marconi successfully experiments with his wireless telegraphy system in Italy, leading to the first transatlantic signals from Poldhu, Cornwall, UK to St. John's, Newfoundland in 1901.

Page 7: Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

1898

• 1898 Valdemar Poulsen patents his "Telegraphone," recording magnetically on steel wire

Page 8: Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

• 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

Page 9: Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

1901

• The Victor Talking Machine Company is founded by Emile Berliner and Eldridge Johnson.

• Experimental optical recordings are made on motion picture film.

Page 10: Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

• 1906 Lee DeForest invents the triode vacuum tube, the first electronic signal amplifier.

• 1910 Enrico Caruso is heard in the first live broadcast from the Metropolitan Opera, NYC.

Page 11: Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

1912 -1913

• 1912 Major Edwin F. Armstrong is issued a patent for a regenerative circuit, making radio reception practical.

• The first "talking movie" is demonstrated by Edison using his Kinetophone process, a cylinder player mechanically synchronized to a film projector

Page 12: Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

1916

• A patent for the superheterodyne circuit is issued to Armstrong.

• The Society of Motion Picture Engineers (SMPE) is formed.

• Edison does live-versus-recorded demonstrations in Carnegie Hall, NYC.

Page 13: Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

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.

Page 14: Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

• 1919 The Radio Corporation of America (RCA) is founded. It is owned in part by United Fruit.

• 1921 The first commercial AM radio broadcast is made by KDKA, Pittsburgh PA.

1919 -1921

Page 15: Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

1925

• Bell Labs develops a moving armature lateral cutting system for electrical recording on disk. Concurrently they Introduce the Victor Orthophonic 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.

Page 16: Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

1926

• 1926 O'Neill patents iron oxide-coated paper tape.

Page 17: Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

1927

• 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.

Page 18: Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

1967• Richard C. Heyser devises the "TDS" (Time Delay Spectrometry)

acoustical measurement scheme, which paves the way for the revolutionary "TEF" (Time Energy Frequency) technology.

• Altec-Lansing introduces "Acousta-Voicing," a concept of room equalization utilizing variable multiband filters.

• Elektra releases the first electronic music recording: Morton Subotnick's Silver Apples of the Moon.

• The Monterey International Pop Festival becomes the first large rock music festival.

• The Broadway musical Hair opens with a high-powered sound system.

• The first operational amplifiers are used in professional audio equipment, notably as summing devices for multichannel

Page 19: Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

1969

• 1969 Dr. Thomas Stockham begins to experiment with digital tape recording.

• Bill Hanley and Company designs and builds the sound system for the Woodstock Music Festival.

• 3M introduces Scotch 206 and 207 magnetic tape, with a s/n ratio 7 dB better than Scotch 111.

Page 20: Audio Timeline By: Eric Sutton Teacher: Mr. Hardin

Thanks for WatchingBy: Eric Sutton

• Credits to http://www.aes.org/aeshc/docs/audio.history.timeline.html