Free Ambient Music Compilation Explores Earliest Recording Of The Human Voice

Free Music Friday: InFrequency has released a free ambient music album, Au Clair De La Lune, that brings together tracks from nine electronic music artists.

Musicians featured:

  • PHILIPPE JELLI
  • JIMMY BEHAN
  • VENUS VULTURE
  • THOMAS ANFIELD & DAVID BIRCHAM
  • RICHARD LAINHART
  • CIMARRON CORPÉ
  • SHIN ICHIRO A
  • ROB THEAKSTON
  • SIGHUP

InFrequency asked the musicians to submit their own interpretations of an 1860 recording by Édouard-Léon Scott that’s thought to be the first recording of the human voice.

The free release goes along with a limited-edition two CD release of the same name. Details at the Infrequency site.

Download link (zshare)

This project is a conceptual extension of breathing life back into this document through modern technology; deciphering a voice that was etched into a thin layer of oil lamp smoke, and featuring a diverse group of international contemporary composers, creating new works from this ten second piece of history.

The original recording was made by Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville on April 9, 1860 using his own invention, the phonautograph, and consists of a series of scratches on a roll of blackened paper. Scott had never developed a way to play back his recordings and they went unheard for 148 years. In 2008, scientists at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory converted the thin lines back into audio, allowing us to hear a woman singing a segment of the folk song Au Clair de la Lune.

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