I read about this in the book "Cowboys and Indies" (horrible title), which covers the history of recorded sound, including both the technology and the businesses that depended on it, as well as the cultural shifts that paralleled this.
Sidenote: there was a piece a little over a year ago about the ’talking dolls" that used a wax cylinder that essentially self-destructed on initial playback. Apparently, some one found a pair of the dolls with intact cylinders and using the Lawrence Berkeley Labs IRENE, some preservationists were able to extract the sounds. It was apparently young girls singing a nursery rhyme, which, the piece concluded, may be the earliest recording of "music" extant.
Fascinating stuff.
Sidenote: there was a piece a little over a year ago about the ’talking dolls" that used a wax cylinder that essentially self-destructed on initial playback. Apparently, some one found a pair of the dolls with intact cylinders and using the Lawrence Berkeley Labs IRENE, some preservationists were able to extract the sounds. It was apparently young girls singing a nursery rhyme, which, the piece concluded, may be the earliest recording of "music" extant.
Fascinating stuff.