A Site Dedicated to all enthusiasts of Classic Style Banjo
For those who missed my earlier post. I have been speaking to Partick from:
www. phonozoic.net
His reply is very interesting. He says that we will receive a "preview" of the cylinder!
Dear Ian:--
Greetings from Parke Hunter's hometown! You're very welcome to make the use of tracks from "Acoustic Recordings of the Banjo" which you propose. You have a marvelous website underway, and if excerpts from the CD will help to enhance it, I'll be delighted for that to happen.
As an aside, I recently identified a box of cylinders at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History which had been used for the Edison phonograph exhibit at the Paris Exposition of 1889. According to a contemporary handwritten list of selections, one of the cylinders should contain a banjo solo -- which I believe would be the oldest known recording of the banjo, and most likely a mid-1889 performance by Will Lyle (William B. Lomas). I hope we'll get to hear it one day soon!
Best,
Patrick
Sound historian Patrick Feaster has had first crack at helping bring back to life the lost sounds of 130 years ago. During a 2-month stint in the "nation's attic" at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History, he turned up undreamed-of finds, including long-lost cylinders recorded at the 1889 World's Fair in Paris and what may be the first-ever sound recording on a disk. Archives and artifacts, however, are only part of Feaster's chosen work. Just as important, he says, is his mission of using modern technology to resurrect long-vanished voices and sounds—some of them never intended to be revived.
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Patrick was featured in http://www.sciencemag.org/ this week for those who are interested.
Ian
Amazing stuff -- this is real progress! 1889, no less... what a fascinating glimpse into the 19th century!
Thank you, Patrick, for your work. I'm really looking forward to listening to these sounds from the past.
Can't wait to read Patrick's article. Also, according to the Encyclopedia of Recorded Sound (pg 69), its authors points to 1889 as the "[t]he first banjo music to be heard..." with "Banjo Jingles."
So if there was a Banjo Revolution, would the Earl of Scruggs be the first aristocrat to be guillotined?
I think that people who play the banjo in the dark, whilst wearing a hat would be first for the chop, but I can think of a few others who deserve it too. :-)
Ian
Oh well -- fortunately, being banjoists, we haven't got any vital organs in our heads, so it's no big loss!
Somehow "Banjo Jingles" sounds familiar. Do we have the dots somewhere? I shall have a look in my archives...
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