SOFT PIANO SOLO BY MRS EYRE |
Version Française English Version |
Introduction:
In April 1877, Charles Cros wrote a paper describing his invention
of the paléophone, the first machine capable of recording and playing
back sounds, based on the principles of Léon Scott de Martinville, who
managed to record sounds without playing them back. In late 1877,
Thomas Edison also discovered the possibiliy of recording sounds, and built
his first phonograph. With a sheet of tinfoil covering a grooved cylinder,
Edison's phonograph did not allow playing back records more than a few times
without destroying them. Later in the 1880s,
Bell and Tainter improved Edison's phonograph by replacing the
fragile sheet of tinfoil with a wax coated cylinder, which could be played many
times. They called their machine graphophone. In
1888, Thomas Edison decided to improve his phonograph using Bell and Tainter's
wax cylinder, and built his perfected phonograph. The first specimens
were offered to
important people such as Colonel Gouraud in England,
Gustave Eiffel in France, etc. Other people were called by Edison for
recording worldwide celebrities such as Brahms, Tchaïkovsky, Aton
Rubinstein, etc. Incredibly, most of these recordings survived the years and can
now be heard using modern techniques.
This page is about one of these recordings: a white wax cylinder sent to Edison
by Colonel Gouraud. This cylinder contains a piano performance called Soft Piano Solo by Mrs Eyre,
whose quality is surprising for its time. As a matter of fact, it was difficult
to make piano recordings which had a decent sound quality (without excessive
distortion). One explanation for the quality of this cylinder is the wax itself:
being a derivate of a metal soap, it was much softer than later wax, which could
allow a better cut.
Several steps were done to clean this
amazing wax cylinder. I say amazing because most of the wax
cylinders recorded with piano never gave a good piano sound. This
one appears to have been recorded in amazing conditions, probably
the very soft white wax gave better results, though very fragile.
Before trying to do any sort of filtering,
hiss removal and such, I have removed silent spaces before and
after the recording. This reduced the size of the WAV file, and
so the time taken by later operations. I have then manually
removed the clicks I could hear and see in the wave form. I tried
to do some automatic click removal, but my manual declicking
happened to be better in most cases. Still, I passed an automatic
declick on the manually declicked file to remove whatever the
software would find clicking. Finally, I tried to remove the
locked groove. This gave a first file, from
which I did several attempts of filtering and hiss removal. These
attempts are listed in the below below, along with the cleaned
files without filtering.
Filtering gave good results. I did three
types of low-pass filterings: 2000Hz, 3000Hz and 5000Hz. 2000Hz gave
the best results but seemed to be alter the piano sound, though
this is not very audible. 5000Hz seemed to leave the piano
unchanged, but left some surface noise.
Hiss removal is an amazing helper. It
removed a lot of the surface noise, but some of it still remained
and played like a robot-like digitized sound. Filtering over a
hiss removal gave much better results. Here again, 2000Hz removed
most of the surface noise. 3000Hz gave slightly better results
but some of the "robot" hiss remained. 5000Hz was
better for the piano, but not recommended if you don't like the
hiss sound.
I have therefore compiled a list of MP3
files. The first one is the original manually declicked file,
without locked groove and silent spaces. The second one had a
hiss removal applied. The rest are my attempts of filtering with
and without hiss removal.
Conclusion:
These first trials gave quite good results
in my opinion. I personally prefer the version with 2000Hz low-pass
filter (no hiss removal). However, the piano is better preserved
at 5000Hz, but the surface noise is more audible. It is surprising
to see how well one could record a piano at that time. Several
bass frequencies can be heard in this recording. Of course, there
are many programs that can remove clicks, hiss and such. I did not
experience them, and it is clear that much better results will come
out of a longer study of how to clean the Soft Piano Solo original
file. Any suggestion will be very welcome.
David Winter