@@ijmr2005 the reason hers sounds so bad is because she destroyed the original cylinder as she didn’t like it. What we hear is a cast of the original cylinder
@@MovingOlives3437 Likely due to the fact the victorian era recorders were powered by a hand crank, so the RPM was unstable, if the playback is at a constant RPM, then the playback will feature those pitch wobbles.
@@Greenpoloboy3 I do not think so. Many modern proper videos have way better quality. All they use is a Phone which is more of a Camera today in modern standards. The quality in this video is SUPER disgusting but makes sense as it's from 1890's almost
What I could make out from the beginning dialogue: "Big Ben, Westminster, London. Striking half past 10, a quarter to 11, and 11 o' clock. July the 16th, 1890. (Of course) made by Miss Ferguson and Graham Hope."
Chiming devices, hammers and bells are original ones from 1859. Chimes sounds weird, because this is recorded to wax cylinder and that devices cannot hold stable RPM, so the recording is getting slower and faster...
Robbie Edward's MASSIVE business SayersTMt They weren’t. They would lose several minutes of accuracy, in a week. Probably more. Weather is a nightmare for old mechanical clocks.
Robbie Edward's MASSIVE business SayersTMt there are exceptions. It doesn’t only depend on weather, either. Build quality, and materials used can also have an affect on timekeeping.
I believe he must've been inside that tower to ensure sound quality recording of those bells and those bells are indeed very endeafening up close. Awesome work and feels like time travel too hearing that recording from that time!
to hear this bell tho in its prime is so awesome knowing that its still the same bell that chimes to this day and other then the old recorder sounds it still sounds just as good as it did then
People complain about how nowadays everyone is obsessed with reordering everything, but look how hard people worked back in those days just to recorder a moment. This audio is fascinating for us because it has more than 100 years old, but for the man who recorded it was just another day of his life. The desire of recordering the history it's probably on our blood.
Graham Hope, the announcer, and Mary Helen Ferguson were both secretaries who worked for George Gouraud, Thomas Edison's agent in England. The two primarily did dictation from phonograph cylinders.
If you listen to the ring of 'Big Ben' (which is the name given to the bell that rings the hours, not to the clock itself), you will note that the tone was different back then when compared to now. The reason for that is that the bell has in fact cracked from years of being pounded hourly and the note has changed. I think I like the new note better.
If you listen past the static, and the warble, (victorian era recording equipment wasn’t terrific.) you can hear that the bells sound better, as they were much newer. (40 years old instead of 160.) Years of use changes the pitch of bells, if you were to listen to a modern recording and this one, this one would have sounded better.
Though camera quality of phones and even sometimes direct recordings from high end devices replicate physical sound, listening to numerous videos of the bells ringing in recent past to this particular recording it's amazing right, the bells do in fact sound much newer and brighter!
I’m proud to be an electrical and electronics engineer, a member of the same industry that designed and invented one of the many reasons why this can be watched in 4K for example from the palm of someone’s hand.
What a wonderful collection you have on your channel! I do hope you can add more of these exciting historical sounds!!! Thank you for sharing and taking care of history alive!
If only you could get rid of that warbling. Unfortunately the warbling is something would be in the recording itself and not what plays it back. Obviously the device used wasn't exactly precise but at least it got the noise.
The Restoration of Dr Who the warbling was something due to the way the cylinder was kept and the dust that got into the grooves and all the times it's been played
Hey kids! Today we're going to talk about descriptions. Read them. They have actual information. This was recorded in 1890. Not 1914. Not 2008, but 1890. I guess that could probably explain the weird sounds, but still, READ THEM.
This sounds very clear considering how old this is. Can you imagine life back then? No electrical conveniences either. These recordings were made from hand cranks and springs.
Big Ben Westminster London striking half past ten a quarter till eleven and eleven o clock July the sixtieth 1890 Of course Made by miss Ferguson and graham hope **chimes**
It says “Big Ben, Westminister, London, Striking, Half Past 10, 10 O clock, Quarter to 11, and 11 o clock. July 16, Eighteen Hundred and Nintey. Recording by Miss Ferguson and Graham Hope”
Imagine if you told the guy that in 2023 everyone would be carrying this recording around in their pocket everyday 📱 he wouldn’t have believed you. Although he was properly quite comfortable with the London Underground it had been already been running for 27 years, although of course not the size it is today.
Graham hope said "Big ben Westminster london striking at half past ten a quarter to eleven and eleven O clock july 16,1890 of course made by miss ferguson and graham hope."
"Big ben, Westminster, London, strinking half past 10, a quarter to 11, and 11 o'clock, July 16 1890 (eighteen hundred and ninety), Recorded by Miss Ferguson, and Graham Hope."
for those wondering what this should sound like in better quality, i found this video of a news report on big ben and the bell audio is pitched down, it matches pretty close and sounds like this. th-cam.com/video/nm0dNYvZlQQ/w-d-xo.html
@@Kun.mp4 Your sources are incorrect or just lies. The bell was cracked on 1859. 30 years before this recording. I order you to take back your comment as it makes you seem embarrassing.
It wasn't wrong, there's 4 kinds of chimes, the first one was the half hour, the second one was the three quarter hour, the third one is the quarter hour, wasn't heard in the vid. and the last one was the 12 strikes.
That is good quality for a wax cylinder
Yes, it is.
Villagernumber77 especially when the main tolls happen, it really captures the timbre and beneath the noise you can really hear it quite vividly
@@ijmr2005 the reason hers sounds so bad is because she destroyed the original cylinder as she didn’t like it. What we hear is a cast of the original cylinder
Why is the audio going up and down like this ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@MovingOlives3437 Likely due to the fact the victorian era recorders were powered by a hand crank, so the RPM was unstable, if the playback is at a constant RPM, then the playback will feature those pitch wobbles.
This recording is- woah. I can’t believe such a old recording exists. I wonder how it’s doing right now.
@Red Panda :3 by someone called Scott martinville
It’s Almost Done With Repairs! Only 4 Or 3 Months Left! Hooray
@@channelsgoneandmoved4032 i completely forgot about this, but thats pogchamp
@@channelsgoneandmoved4032 Wut?
It’s in an archive. It’s not very impressive considering the first photo was taken 55 years before this recording
1:05 begins the chime we all know and love
Tristan Baugh Too late boiz
7
thirty years before Gustav Holst the planets
That bell is so terrifying in this old audio quality.
MatrixPandaGamer its good ya know!
...
Really? It's old? Man I thought today was 1899.. FUCK
MatrixPandaGamer_22 nah he just frying eggs
@@@zaaaaaaay2x Now I am bloody starving , all this talk of fried eggs .
Better sound quality than many TH-cam videos of today. Amazing recording!!
Can't tell if this is sarcasm.
@@Xenorvya No Sir it isn't . Some youtube videos are terrible quality!!
@@Greenpoloboy3 tbh, I agree
@@RageDasher_7751 :) thank you. Hence the expression "recorded with a toaster"
@@Greenpoloboy3
I do not think so. Many modern proper videos have way better quality. All they use is a Phone which is more of a Camera today in modern standards. The quality in this video is SUPER disgusting but makes sense as it's from 1890's almost
What I could make out from the beginning dialogue: "Big Ben, Westminster, London. Striking half past 10, a quarter to 11, and 11 o' clock. July the 16th, 1890. (Of course) made by Miss Ferguson and Graham Hope."
Jose C. Pretty good catch
Enzo C. Your smart
Big brain
The weird chimes and echos were probably caused by how old this recording is...
I think it was also because the system that made it chime or those hammer like things weren't as new or precise as the modern day one.
Chiming devices, hammers and bells are original ones from 1859. Chimes sounds weird, because this is recorded to wax cylinder and that devices cannot hold stable RPM, so the recording is getting slower and faster...
Robbie Edward's MASSIVE business SayersTMt They weren’t. They would lose several minutes of accuracy, in a week. Probably more. Weather is a nightmare for old mechanical clocks.
Robbie Edward's MASSIVE business SayersTMt there are exceptions. It doesn’t only depend on weather, either. Build quality, and materials used can also have an affect on timekeeping.
RPM refers to the speed of the record, not the clock.
Did they have to fry eggs while recording?
Sebastian Simion yep
The background noise
Well yes. It was mandatory back then
No is the very very old film static from 1890
hahhaha
I am in awe and amazement that I am listening to something recorded in 1890,106 years before I was born!Wow just wow!
I believe he must've been inside that tower to ensure sound quality recording of those bells and those bells are indeed very endeafening up close. Awesome work and feels like time travel too hearing that recording from that time!
127 years and 1 day ago was its anniversary
CrazySharkGaming oh hell I forgotten the Anniversary
129 years ago now
4 more days and it's gonna be 130 years old!
130 years now
130 years!
And here we are! 126 years later! I commented on this current day! July 16th, 2016!
actually its 156
oop that's when it was built never mind
Beta Then U lol
*127 years now
Now that recording is almost 130 years old, yet still sounds clear.
to hear this bell tho in its prime is so awesome knowing that its still the same bell that chimes to this day and other then the old recorder sounds it still sounds just as good as it did then
People complain about how nowadays everyone is obsessed with reordering everything, but look how hard people worked back in those days just to recorder a moment. This audio is fascinating for us because it has more than 100 years old, but for the man who recorded it was just another day of his life.
The desire of recordering the history it's probably on our blood.
Graham Hope, the announcer, and Mary Helen Ferguson were both secretaries who worked for George Gouraud, Thomas Edison's agent in England. The two primarily did dictation from phonograph cylinders.
☺☺
Fabulous trivia! 👏
Here is a restored version of the recording, th-cam.com/video/bOgtmNiqnKg/w-d-xo.html
If you listen to the ring of 'Big Ben' (which is the name given to the bell that rings the hours, not to the clock itself), you will note that the tone was different back then when compared to now. The reason for that is that the bell has in fact cracked from years of being pounded hourly and the note has changed. I think I like the new note better.
Jon-Sean Kempson Which new tone? This recording was when it was fairly new
The 'old' note was when the bell was first cast - the 'new' note is since the bell cracked, the note as it is now.
just hearing these old recordings gives me the shivers I don't know why it just sounds very scary to me LOL
Same. Probably for the fact that we are hearing a dead man speak
Listen to lofi musics, it wont shiver you to static noise anymore
130 now
@@suunflourrr2720 hahaha
It’s definitely because they found out how to record out a wax cylinder
If you listen past the static, and the warble, (victorian era recording equipment wasn’t terrific.) you can hear that the bells sound better, as they were much newer. (40 years old instead of 160.) Years of use changes the pitch of bells, if you were to listen to a modern recording and this one, this one would have sounded better.
Though camera quality of phones and even sometimes direct recordings from high end devices replicate physical sound, listening to numerous videos of the bells ringing in recent past to this particular recording it's amazing right, the bells do in fact sound much newer and brighter!
I’m proud to be an electrical and electronics engineer, a member of the same industry that designed and invented one of the many reasons why this can be watched in 4K for example from the palm of someone’s hand.
I wish I could go back in time to see this
The expression, "Put a sock in it!"( Sock in the Cone)
Comes from the fact that, early Phonograph "machines" Records Didn't have a volume knob .🍺😅
Jack the Ripper was doing his crimes at this time
That was two years before this recording but it still would have been fresh in everyone's minds
it was sometime in the 1830's
1888
holy shit i thought cringe
it was in 1888
This is so cool how old it sounded
A week or two late. 127 years... and a late happy 158th to our good old friend, Elizabeth tower
What a wonderful collection you have on your channel! I do hope you can add more of these exciting historical sounds!!! Thank you for sharing and taking care of history alive!
This is very amazing yet uncanny.
Wow it looks like Big Ben is very old
I agree but in 1890 technology was not so great than today…sorry 1890 :/
it was built in the 1850's
@@danielcarneiro5483 nel 1843
It’s cool to see how things have improved
Audio: hey guys do you want eggs and bacon? 🍳🥓
If only you could get rid of that warbling. Unfortunately the warbling is something would be in the recording itself and not what plays it back. Obviously the device used wasn't exactly precise but at least it got the noise.
it's pretty good for 1890
Fair point, I can fairly make out what's being said, atmospheric by my admission!
What do you want stereo sound? It's 1890!
The Restoration of Dr Who the warbling was something due to the way the cylinder was kept and the dust that got into the grooves and all the times it's been played
For 1890 it's good
Is there any other recordings like this, during this time?
Hey kids! Today we're going to talk about descriptions. Read them. They have actual information. This was recorded in 1890. Not 1914. Not 2008, but 1890. I guess that could probably explain the weird sounds, but still, READ THEM.
After listening to this, I don’t think I will be able to sleep ever again..
*sleeps after listening to this 15-20 times*
I think you will just have nightmares
@@misterzag2871 I just have normal dreams
@@nullname0 are we twins?
I'm not scared either!
@@TheHappyGabeShow we are not twins
I remember this listening to this recording back in 1890 when it was first released.. good ol' days
This sounds very clear considering how old this is. Can you imagine life back then? No electrical conveniences either. These recordings were made from hand cranks and springs.
Do you reckon the man who is talking at the beginning is now deceased?
well the recording must've been made when he was still alive
Lol
Nah, he's still walking around.
yeah he's probably watching this video saying holy fucking shit that's what I sound like
Na he just chilling, sleeping
0:53 The Westminster Chimes
1:05 Big Ben Strike
I feel like due to the age of this recording now, the clock bells sound a bit weird
last year i got a 1890 6 pence from my grandad. its amazing to think that this is the England it was made in and the exact same year too!
Big Ben Westminster London striking half past ten a quarter till eleven and eleven o clock July the sixtieth 1890
Of course Made by miss Ferguson and graham hope
**chimes**
That the 2nd oldest footage I've seen I love it.
what is that Eerie Sound in the background that sounds kinda like a steam train chugging along?
You're hearing surface noise on the recording … it's tempo is the revolution of the wax cylinder.
It says “Big Ben, Westminister, London, Striking, Half Past 10, 10 O clock, Quarter to 11, and 11 o clock. July 16, Eighteen Hundred and Nintey. Recording by Miss Ferguson and Graham Hope”
Everyone who has spoken or was around to listen to this specific recording live is now dead..
even the newborns are.
Everyone: OMG THAT IS SOOOOO TERRIFYING
Me: it’s just grooves carved into was what is there to be afraid of...
WOW!!
The only thing on that picture that still exists is The Big Ben and maybe some other few buildings and the road
Its july 16 1890 in 0:09
If you lsiten closley, you can failtly hear people and horses walking in the back ground
SOMEONE COMPARISON SOUND IN 1890 VS 1945 VS 2000 VS 2017
The fact that this is recorded in 1890, yet i almost understand this man's english.
i was born 114 years later after this recording
For me, I was born 120 years in late July 2010 after this recording.
Beautiful then and Beautiful now. Big Ben holds a special place in my heart
and now it will not be ring for 4 years
Yeah 157 years
Work on your grammer
About 15-25 years ago there were people who could’ve heard this live and still be around to tell you
Think about that
Now, picture an old, creepy rule britannia recording and british soldiers. then think of the British Empire. I suddenly feel proud to be british.
What a lovely old Recording
That clock survived WW2 being shot bombed burned... and yet that clock kept going
And yet it’s still here today ☺️
Imagine if you told the guy that in 2023 everyone would be carrying this recording around in their pocket everyday 📱 he wouldn’t have believed you.
Although he was properly quite comfortable with the London Underground it had been already been running for 27 years, although of course not the size it is today.
Big Ben Hit A New Record For Surviving 162 Years
00:23 -00:31 Big Ben sounds great
0:53
Although its mildly disturbing its really cool history.
If you listen very intently with headphones you can hear that there's a rave going on in the background.
WAS THIS RECORDED IN ABBEY ROAD
Did it say 1901 on the title it says 1890!
It's 2020 guy is reach 130 year since old record Big Ben chimes
Firewood popping while it’s burning
I don’t what’s scarier, the fact that I just heard a dead man talk, or that I’m listening to this at night
His voice is beautiful.
You know, when you look past the disoriented sound, it actually sounds better when it was still new
Who was the announcer on that cylinder, & who was Miss Ferguson?
Wow no wonder the audio is so bad, they were trying eggs in the background which made it sound like it's from I dunno 1890
Graham hope said "Big ben Westminster london striking at half past ten a quarter to eleven and eleven O clock july 16,1890 of course made by miss ferguson and graham hope."
"Big ben, Westminster, London, strinking half past 10, a quarter to 11, and 11 o'clock, July 16 1890 (eighteen hundred and ninety), Recorded by Miss Ferguson, and Graham Hope."
I was born about 101 years, 9 months, and 21 days after this recording.
I was born 106 years and 24 days after this recording 😊
it rings my heart
This was 89 years before I was born.
Good work, sir.🇬🇧
for those wondering what this should sound like in better quality, i found this video of a news report on big ben and the bell audio is pitched down, it matches pretty close and sounds like this. th-cam.com/video/nm0dNYvZlQQ/w-d-xo.html
it's weird knowing my ancestors were probably there hearing that at the moment
Why does it sound so different compared to now?
it sounded the same, but since this recording is from 1890 it sounds very scratchy
Icy Neptune ツ the Big Ben bell was replaced.
@@Kun.mp4 Your sources are incorrect or just lies. The bell was cracked on 1859. 30 years before this recording. I order you to take back your comment as it makes you seem embarrassing.
My gosh that Big Ben bell is soooooo terrifying and old
Sound in 1890s sounded really old
and almost like hearing a ghost talk.
1:05 the start of big bens chime we all know in love ❤
does this have a high quality
@PA Chimes oh ok
th-cam.com/video/bOgtmNiqnKg/w-d-xo.htmlsi=v76dJw4s1bbHJZdB
Did not know that audio recording existed this far back! I thought it came around in the 1930s, not the 1890s!
The first audio recording device was invented in 1860 a full 70 years from what you thought
@@Kret-o1 year after Big Ben Ssrr built (it was built in 1859)
r.i.p bongs July/16/ 1890- ????/??/2017
Paul e Ringo no its 2018
No it's July 11, 1859 - August 21, 2017 But they will be alive again in 2021
Don't worry it's just getting some repairs, for 4 years... ._.
The bongs are still played for special occasions.
129 years later, we are here
My name is Graeme (spelled differently)... still feels creepy hearing my name like that though. @ 0:20
How The hell Did people find This?
who had to stand in the rain while doing this video?
Sounds like a poor bell cause of the sound and how old this is
I was born 121 years after this recording
i'd say that this is the unique version of the Big Ben chimes. Even it is a little bit scary tho, but how can u get scared of a famous landmark in UK?
scary sounding chimes
the first chime was wrong
I Have Cripling Depression big ben gets older
It wasn't wrong, there's 4 kinds of chimes, the first one was the half hour, the second one was the three quarter hour, the third one is the quarter hour, wasn't heard in the vid. and the last one was the 12 strikes.
They hand rung it back then, but now its all done by robotics
dang the quality, i only understood 11 AM😻
Big Ben bell sounds like a steel bell
It was 130 years ago today.
Yup
this was clearer then the recording of au clair de la lune from 1860
quarter to ele ELEVEN O CLOCK!!
Lol🤣
Why did the clock stop randomly?
The first chime was the half-past chime. The second chime was the quarter to chime. The third one was the hourly chime.