Sound Effects on Record
Posted by: Laura Jenemann
A collection of sounds effects from the California Radio Historical Society provides a glimpse into the the “golden age of radio” in the 1930’s and 1940’s.
Posted in: Radio, Recorded Sound
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Posted by: Laura Jenemann
A collection of sounds effects from the California Radio Historical Society provides a glimpse into the the “golden age of radio” in the 1930’s and 1940’s.
Posted in: Radio, Recorded Sound
Posted by: Laura Jenemann
Learn about Chick Webb's appearances on NBC Radio, with notes of Ella Fitzgerald and Rudy Vallée.
Posted in: Jazz, NBC Radio Collection, Radio, Recorded Sound
Posted by: Matthew Barton
A chance meeting of three World War I veterans on Christmas Eve, 1918 leads them to a shared dream and an ancient quest.
Posted in: NBC Radio Collection, Recorded Sound
Posted by: Laura Jenemann
Revisit New Year's Eve celebrations of the past through the Library's NBC Radio Index Cards.
Posted in: NBC Radio Collection, Recorded Sound
Posted by: Matthew Barton
Max Jordan was an NBC reporter who left the microphone for priesthood.
Posted in: NBC Radio Collection, Recorded Sound, Uncategorized
Posted by: Library of Congress
On Nov. 22, 2023, the Now See Hear! blog published a post on Suzanne Vega’s song “Tom’s Diner” and its use as in the development of the MP3 standard for digitized audio. This post was published prematurely and has been removed.
Posted in: Recorded Sound
Posted by: Cary O’Dell
The world of the Library of Congress' National Recording Registry--and, indeed, our wide, wide world of recorded sound history is so vast, the even what seems like the most simple about the NRR's 600 titles/works are not easy to answer....
Posted in: National Recording Registry, Recorded Sound
Posted by: Cary O’Dell
See what's screening this coming Thursday night at the Packard Campus in Culpeper!
Posted in: Motion Pictures, Native American, Packard Campus Theater, Recorded Sound
Posted by: Stacie Seifrit-Griffin
When Native American filmmaker Daniel Golding came to the Library of Congress to research, listen and translate the Library's rare collection of 1890 wax cylinders featuring Passamaquoddy and Quechan songs and languages, he had no idea that the Library's preservation team had a 100-year-old surprise for him and his son.
Posted in: American Folklife Center, Early Recording Industry, National Audio-Visual Conservation Center, Native American, Packard Campus Theater, Recorded Sound