Strictly speaking, many of the silent films were issued with sheet music so that theatre owners could present music along with the film, but by "sound track" I will assume you are referring to recorded sound that was synchronized with the movie.
The WB film Don Juan (1926) was distributed with a Vitaphone sound track, consisting only of music and sound effects, but this probably fits your definition. The Jazz Singer (1927) had Al Jolson's singing parts (and music) on a soundtrack recording, but no recorded dialog, but it caused a sensation and is widely cited as the first "talking movie". Lights of New York (1928) was the first movie shown with a full soundtrack, including all dialog parts. All of these were Warner Brothers films.
Warner Baxter.
The Mysterious Dr. Fu Manchu. Starring Warner Oland was a 1929 movie.
Edison, who invented the phonograph, did experiment with phonographs synched to movie projectors around l9l5 or earlier. this did not work out. sound-on-Film was rather painstakingly evolved by various inventors in the twenties and went commercial in l927 . Warner Brothers controlled the process. Thus, it follows the movie The Jazz Singer- various newsreels with sound- and Bugs Bunny all Warner produced, rolled off the cinematic lines in l927.
The first movie with sound was Fritz Lang's "Siegfried" which he created in 1925, but it was a musical, and had no voice track. The first movie with talking throughout the entire movie, was "Lights Of New York", that came out in 1928 by the Warner brothers.
First production talkie- or sound film. this was by Warner Brothers who controlled the process, which made cartoons ( Bugs Bunny) and Newsreels live and vivid- and also a remote forerunner, process wise- of TV newcasting.
The first movie with picture and sound was "The Jazz Singer".
Alfred Hitchcock directed the first British movie with sound. The movie was titled Blackmail.
No
The first movie to use sound dialog is The Jazz Singer (original version from 1927).
As The jazz singer was the first movie with sound it would have to be that.(1927).
A movie using sound was called a "talking" picture, or a "talky".
They are the old sound stages of Warner Brothers studios.