| Published: | Oct 25, 2012 8:01 PM EDT |
| Updated: | Oct 26, 2012 6:31 AM EDT |
SCHENECTADY, N.Y. (AP) - Researchers have recovered and digitized what experts say is the oldest playable recording of an American voice and history's first-ever recorded musical performance.
Also included: the first recorded blooper.
The recording was done on a sheet of tinfoil on a phonograph invented by Thomas Edison and made in St. Louis in 1878. It opens with a short cornet solo and is followed by a man reciting nursery rhymes.
Near the end of the 78-second recording, the man laughs after messing up one of the words to "Old Mother Hubbard."
The tinfoil and the newly digitized recording was played publicly Thursday by a museum in Schenectady (skeh-NEHK'-tuh-dee), N.Y., where Edison founded the General Electric Co.
Experts at California's Berkeley Lab recovered the recordings using technology developed for the project.
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