The process sound recording on a tin wrapped cylinder was invented in 1877
Thomas Edison.
The first acoustic recording technology was developed by Thomas Edison in 1877. Edison's invention, the phonograph, used a mechanical process to capture sound vibrations on a rotating cylinder coated with a thin layer of tinfoil.
"Mary had a little lamb" were the first words successfully recorded by Edison when testing the phonograph. Edison made the recording in his tinfoil cylinder phonograph, the invention that made him famous in 1877.
Thomas Edison
The materials Edison used to make the phonograph was tinfoil made into a cylinder with a rigid stylus pressed on it. The first recording was of Edison saying the nursery rhythm Mary had a little lamb.
"The first practical sound recording and reproduction device was the mechanical phonograph cylinder, invented by Thomas Edison in 1877 and patented in 1878" - from the wikipedia page on sound recording
The first sound recording process was invented by Thomas Edison in 1877. He created the phonograph, which could capture and play back sound for the first time in history.
The original vinyl record was made of vinyl. The original phonographic recording was made by Thomas A. Edison on a wax cylinder.
Thomas Edison
Thomas Edison
thomas edison
Thomas Edison is credited with inventing the process for the first sound recording using tin-wrapped cylinders that could be played on a phonograph. This invention, known as the phonograph, revolutionized the way sound could be recorded and played back.