Mystery recordings will now
be heard for the first time in about one hundred years
April 5, 2022
JENNIFER
VANASCO
Early
opera recordings on wax cylinders 1900-1904, recorded by Lionel Mapleson.
Robert Kato Lionel/
New York
Public Library
Before audio playlists, before cassette tapes, and even before
records, there were wax cylinders — the earliest, mass-produced way people
could both listen to commercial music and record themselves.
In the 1890s, they were a revolution. People
slid blank cylinders onto their
Edison
phonographs (or shaved down the wax on commercial cylinders) and recorded their
families, their environments, and themselves.
"When I first started here, it was a format I didn't know much about,"
said Jessica Wood, assistant curator for music and recorded sound at The New
York Public Library for the Performing Arts.
"But it became my favorite format because there are so many unknowns
and it's possible to discover things that haven't been heard since they were
recorded."
They haven't been heard because the wax is so fragile.
The earliest, putty-colored cylinders deteriorate after only a few dozen
listens if played on the
Edison
machines; they crack if you hold them too long in your hand.
And because the wax tubes themselves were unlabeled, many of them remain
mysteries.
"They could be people's birthday parties," Wood said, recordings that
could tell us more about the social history of the time.
"Or they could be "The Star-Spangled Banner" or something
incredibly common," she laughed. "I
really hope for people's birthday parties."
She's particularly curious about a box of unlabeled cylinders she found on a
storage shelf in 2016. All she knows
about them is what was on the inside of the box: Gift of Mary Dana to the New
York Public Library in 1935.
The Endpoint Cylinder and Dictabelt Machine, invented by
Nicholas Bergh, is now on display at the New York Public Library for the
Performing Arts.
Jonathan Blanc/
New York
Public Library
Enter the Endpoint Cylinder and
Dictabelt Machine, invented by Californian Nicholas Bergh, which
recently was acquired by the library. Thanks
to the combination of its laser and needle, it can digitize even broken or
cracked wax cylinders — and there are a lot of those.
But Bergh said, the design of the cylinder, which makes it fragile, is
also its strength.
"
Edison
thought of this format as a recording format, almost like a cassette
machine," Bergh said. "That's
why the format is a [cylinder]. It
is very, very hard to do on a disc. And
that is also why there's so much great material on a wax cylinder that doesn't
exist on disc, like field recorded cylinders, ethnographic material, home
recordings, things like that."
One of those important collections owned by the library is the "Mapleson
Cylinders," a collection recorded by Lionel Mapleson, the Metropolitan
Opera's librarian at the turn of the last century. Mapleson recorded rehearsals
and performances — it is the only way listeners can hear pre-World War I opera
singers with a full orchestra. Bob
Kosovsky, a librarian in the music and recorded sound division, said the
Mapleson Cylinders "represent the first extensive live recordings in
recorded history."
He said that some of the stars sing in ways no contemporary opera singer would
sing. "And that gives us a sort
of a keyhole into what things were like then.
Not necessarily to do it that way today, but just to know what options
are available and how singers and performers and audiences conceived of these
things, which is so different from our own conception. It is a way of opening
our minds to hear what other possibilities exist."
It will take the library a couple of years to digitize all its cylinders.
But when they are through, listeners all over the country should be able
to access them from their home computers, opening a window to what people
sounded like and thought about over one hundred years ago.
Listen to "On the
shores of
Italy
"
ANCIENT
WAX CYLINDER MUSIC! - Bing video
|