The Microphone
Oral historian Alan Dein explores the world-changing cultural history of an overlooked object.
鈥淭esting, testing鈥 1, 2, 3鈥 Is this thing on?鈥
Oral historian Alan Dein explores the world-changing cultural history of an overlooked object.
When we think about the last 100 years of recorded and broadcast sound, we might think about the programmes, the listeners, or maybe the dynamics and physics of it: the mysteries of the ether or the magic of a needle on a disc.
One small thing is often forgotten 鈥 ignored and literally spoken over 鈥 omnipresent but invisible, just out of frame.
The microphone.
It鈥檚 the Zelig of recorded history, a disregarded presence as the world turns.
The microphone was there; it鈥檚 heard it all.
At first an uncanny contraption approached with apprehension. Now an object of ubiquity. In our microphone-saturated era of 鈥榮urveillance capitalism鈥, a smart speaker in the kitchen is now also a smart listener.
The history of the microphone is a history of forgetting all about it.
Alan Dein explores the cultural history of the microphone and argues that this unobtrusive, tenacious thing has changed our lives more profoundly than we realise.
Featuring:
Mhairi Aitken, Ethics Research Fellow at the Alan Turing Institute
Raj Bhan, proprietor of The Spy Shop
David Edgerton, historian and author of The Shock of the Old
David Hendy, cultural historian and author of The 91热爆: A People鈥檚 History
Dawn Scarfe, sound artist
Janet Topp-Fargion, ethnomusicologist and Head of Sound and Vision at the British Library
Chris Watson, sound recordist and musician.
The voice of Olive Shapley courtesy of Manchester Central Library Sound Archives.
The programme includes the following recording, from the 1898 Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits:
C80/816 Vocal group (Unidentified male chorus)
For more information about the Torres Strait recordings, please visit www.true-echoes.com/
With grateful thanks to Sam Inglis; Lloyd Silverthorne; Anthony Bailey and all the great performers at the Spoken Word Poetry Open Mic at Brixton Library.
Producer: Martin Williams
Last on
More episodes
Previous
Broadcasts
- Sun 13 Nov 2022 18:4591热爆 Radio 3
- Sun 31 Mar 2024 18:4591热爆 Radio 3
What was really wrong with Beethoven?
Classical music in a strongman's Russia 鈥 has anything changed since Stalin's day?
What composer Gabriel Prokofiev and I found in Putin's Moscow...
Six Secret Smuggled Books
Six classic works of literature we wouldn't have read if they hadn't been smuggled...
Grid
Seven images inspired by the grid
World Music collector, Sir David Attenborough
The field recordings Attenborough of music performances around the world.