If you go to YOU TUBE and look up Sir Arthur Sullivan, there is, in existence a recording of his voice dated from October 1888, and sent to Thomas Edison. Sullivan was at a friend's dinner party and the friend was a kind of agent for Edison in England - he had phonograph equipment available. He recorded Sullivan and several others that night. In the course of introducing Sullivan the host (a man named Gourand) mentioned that "The Yeoman of the Guard" had opened up to a successful house only a few days earlier (which is true).
It's worth listening to, even if the You Tube video was padded by old recordings of Walter Padmore singing "Jack Point's" role in "Yeoman" in an 1897 recording of "I Have a Song to Sing-O". There are also some early films of the period, including a brief one from 1888.
In any event it actually brings the listener to within aural call of the autumn of terror.
Jeff
It's worth listening to, even if the You Tube video was padded by old recordings of Walter Padmore singing "Jack Point's" role in "Yeoman" in an 1897 recording of "I Have a Song to Sing-O". There are also some early films of the period, including a brief one from 1888.
In any event it actually brings the listener to within aural call of the autumn of terror.
Jeff
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