Talk:Sound recording
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Outline for sound recording article:
Analog sound recording
[edit]Methods of recording
[edit]- Acoustical or Mechanical method
- Electric analogue recording
- Digital recording
Mediums of storing recorded sound
[edit]- Phonograph Records
- Phonograph Cylinder
- Dictaphone Cylinder
- Analogue disc record
- Berliner Gramophone records
- Edison Disc Records
- Vinyl record
- Microgroove records
- Stereo
- "Quadrophonic" recordings
- Ambisonic recordings
- Surround sound
- Phonograph Cylinder
- Wire recordings
- magnetic tape, BASF
- 8-track cartridge
- compact cassettes
Digital sound recording
[edit]
Recording technology
[edit]See also:
Shouldn't this article mention Les Paul, who (AFAIR) invented multi track recording? -- Jimregan 03:30 27 May 2003 (UTC)
Or rather, mention him earlier. (Just saving face for not having read the article, don't mind me...) -- Jimregan 03:32 27 May 2003 (UTC)
You must have been reading it as i was editing it becuase i just added the bit about Les Paul --User:Iain
- That could be it. Good stuff, Iain. -- Jimregan
Most of the stuff on magnetic tape should be separated out into the magnetic tape entry.
this is my first time editing anything, so bear with me. i added this bit about the adat:
"The most notable of this type of recorder is the ADAT. Developed by Alesis and first released in 1991, the ADAT machine is capable of recording 8 tracks of digital audio onto a single S-VHS video cassette. The ADAT machine is still a very common fixture in professional and home studios around the world."
is that proper, or would it be best to replace all that with a simple "See: ADAT"? --Nic.stage 06:09, August 13, 2005 (UTC)
Tinfoil vs. Aluminum foil
[edit]FOr the record (pun unintentional). I think the original Edison phonograph truly used tinfoil, i.e. made of the metal Sn, and efforts to correct it to "aluminium" or "aluminum" foil are incorrect. All descriptions of the Edison phonograph use the word tinfoil (usually a single word, no space). The 1911 Britannica article on foil, http://16.1911encyclopedia.org/F/FO/FOIL.htm, mentions tinfoil but not aluminum foil. I've been Googling to find out just when aluminum foil became common, but I think the rise of aluminum as anything other than an expensive specialty substance did not occur until well into the twentieth century. Indeed, I don't think it was possible until large-scale electricity infrastructure was in place. Dpbsmith 17:28, 5 Mar 2004 (UTC)
- Absolutley correct. Tin foil is stiffer and tends to "krinkle" less than aluminium foil, so is a more suitable medium for engraving, even if it weren't much more common back in the 1870s. -- Infrogmation 17:36, 5 Mar 2004 (UTC)
- Do I recall there was some early patent dispute (Edison vs. Berliner maybe?) turned on the difference in meaning of "emboss" and "inscribe." Something to do with what happens with tinfoil, where I guess the stylus just indents the medium without removing any of it, and everything else (wax, shellac, acetate) in which the stylus or cutter actually removes material. When I was a kid, I tried to make an Edison-style phonograph myself using aluminum foil. I was probably about ten years old at the time. It didn't work. Dpbsmith 14:50, 6 Mar 2004 (UTC)
First recordings
[edit]I am putting this here for people to develop to put on the main entry.
- First British Prime Minister to be recorded: William Gladstone.
- First Pope to be recorded: Leo XIII.
I was once told that if the (known) people who had had recordings made of their voices were put in order of birth, the first would be Lajos Kossuth. (I am putting it slightly more elegantly.) Can anyone confirm this? Jackiespeel 17:31, 8 August 2005 (UTC)
Make this page 'History of sound recording'
[edit]This page seems to me to be an excellent example of the need for better coordinated editing on Wikipedia, something I have been trying to promote at Wikipedia:Root page. Firstly, I suggest one might expect the title 'Sound recording' to be accessed by people expecting to find out primarily about the modern technology, not work their way through the history of the phonograph (important though this is). Secondly, there is not even a link on the page to Sound reproduction which would seem to be an intimate part of the whole idea! And until I put one there there was no link to this page from Sound reproduction. Then the opening sentence is a little odd, using bold in two places.
I've been attempting to pull together the whole subject, using Root page principles, and have put templates on many pages to promote easy navigation and awareness by editors of how the whole subject is being covered. So far this uses Sound reproduction as the Root page with Hubs for various aspects. But Sound reproduction had nothing on it but some links (until I added a paragraph).
I suggest that a new page Sound recording and reproduction would be better as a starting point or Root page, with a Hub page called Sound recording that leads to studio technology etc. This page is an excellent History of sound recording and should be renamed as such, with perhaps some parts copied over to the new Root page. Redirects would bring various things like Sound recording to the Root page. Any objections? I may start the process by creating the new root page (since this does not currently exist), with template, to show how it will work. I feel that with the templates in place many more people will find the pages that they want, and it will be easy for editors to see how the land lies so far. --Lindosland 14:19, 29 March 2006 (UTC)
I have now copied this page and its talk across, as above, and suggest that if this page is turned into a redirect the whole topic scheme will fall into place. Take a look around by navigating back and forth and see if agree that the concept enhances linking and ease of finding things as well as editing. --Lindosland 18:12, 29 March 2006 (UTC)