*February 2023 update:* "Arabian Nights", "Mother Machree", and "A Little Bit of Heaven" are now correctly identified by Shazam, and "Sand Dunes" now yields no result instead of an incorrect result. So in addition to "Ave Maria" and "Cavalleria Rusticana", it can now correctly identify five out of the 25 songs I played.
I would not be surprised if the only algorithm that can easily identify music from 1922 and earlier is UA-cam's content ID match for that sweet licensing money. Public domain is not in the vocabulary of the music industry or Google.
Now going to see if I can find my dad's 78 of The Runaway Train and The Bum Song, that I used to listen to all the time even into my teenage years; and see if either Shazam or UA-cam can identify them. It is too bad the one that we used to call the Chinese Music Torture got broken decades ago...
I think it's really just a matter of whether or not the song is indexed in Shazam's database, more than having anything to do with the effectiveness of the algorithm.
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They seem to have claimed it. Many countries have laws, that say that the copyright will expire after 50-100 years after the dead. This means that early recordings from ABBA will not expire till at least 75 years from now (with German law), while Avicii works will probably expire even before ABBA works, in 2093. I generally think that the way they do it in the US sometimes is better, but sometimes can cause unfortunate things to happen. If you want to do things like in the video, you should consider laws of other countries (my audience is like 20% German, 10% Indonesian, 10% Brazilian and 20% UK, with the rest being other countries for example).
I’ve done it with a lot of early gabber stuff 92-99 and it seems to pick it up fine for most of them even terrorcore, breakbeat. I’ve also had the same luck with internet genre’s like future funk.
I tried to Shazam a song that was recorded onto an audio cassette. It was a Nicaraguan station and found at least two songs that Shazam could not figure out.
I'd think it is a bit difficult and would bring up multiple results perhaps with some more modern music, not least because of multiple samples but also the reuse of tunes and 'phrases' in a lot of them. Just a thought!
Imagine how many bangers there used to be from the early 1900s that were never heard again because the people who owned the records either lost them or broke them, or they were just never recorded at all.
The problem is a LOT of these acoustics are damn obscure even to a collector like me! I didn't recognize half the titles, but more popular stuff like Paul Whiteman or Billy Murray would be recognized by the software.
@@25566 But everything before 1923 is now copyright free and un-monetizeable. So only stuff that was monetized before 2022 would be recognized by Shazam, nothing new is getting in there.
Yeah this isn't a problem with Shazam's ability to match old music, it's a problem with old music's ability to be popular enough to be in the database Shazam accesses.
I did the same experiment with my 78s. Shazam didn't recognize Irving Berlin's "Cheek to Cheek" from the movie "Top Hat" with Fred Astaire, issued in 1936. It did, however manage to pick up the rather obscure "Sing Mit Mir" by Lutz Templin's orchestra from 1943, "Glutrote Rosen" by Rudi Schuricke fron 1942, as well as two other German songs from the same time. Conclusion: Shazam knows its WWII-era German schlagers.
Talking about german stuff, i got my first turntable, a Technics SL-BD20D, and the dude that i got it from gave me a bunch of... schlagers to go with it :D ... Furthermore, every Sunday, there's a local market where people sell stuff, like produce, clothing and footwear and various other stuff. There's this dude that sells various tools and stuff, electronic or mechanic knic-knacks.. He also has a crate of .... MORE SCHLAGERS :D
Music from 1995 and older can be hard to recognize if the artist wasn't big. 1993 and older techno artists can be missunderstod often for anoter artists or not found. I'd say that the digital music archives in general is still very lackning, as well in movies.
@@defcreator187 each to there own taste. But Shazam have helped me discover new artists now and again Now No listening to it i prefer Cassette or Viny, and even Minidisk and CD sometimes but rarer. 👌.
So idk if anyone mentioned it but Shazam has a database that's typically linked with distributors. Whenever a musician uploads a song in order to get on online stores or streaming services, most of the time they have the chance to add it to the Shazam database. Now, if the song is never added to the database, Shazam won't recognize it. This makes sense when it comes to older records because everyone involved with the records is dead and, unless they were (and still are) big artists like Louis Armstrong, chances are no one cared enough to add those songs to the database. So technically it's not Shazam's fault, mainly just people not conserving records (but even that is a complex process cause you'd have to go through record labels)
That was the comment that I want do read. Searching for a song that is not in the Shazam's database is completely ridiculous. The songs that Shazam finds are currently on Spotify. The waves coming out of this device are hardcore analog waves. It is almost impossible for shazam not to recognize these songs. So Shazam has a 100% success rate.
@@petersteele7503 "Shazam has a 100% success rate for songs it knows" me too, I can recognize every song I know. Did that sound stupid? That's how your statement sounds
So how would someone get there music uploaded? Who’d be the surviving people to take care of this? Also, what about copyrights that are extremely old and still valid today, but whose people that care about it are dead? Can it even be enforced?
@@wolfattacker1 If the copyright is privately owned they can be enforced by their estate, but it's quite likely their estate doesn't care or, in many cases, doesn't even know about the copyrights copyrights; however, most were owned by labels and the either merged or were bought out. Sony owned the copyrights to most these songs (acquired from RCA who had owned most of them since the 20's) before they entered the public domain.
the records are conserved, you can listen to most of these on Library of Congress National Jukebox collection...its just that Shazam doesn't prioritize integrating this into their database because nobody cares
There is a thing that makes my blood boil with shazam and other music identifiers. Lots of NCSs and public domain songs are getting identified as songs by Jincheng Zhang a known music thief. He just puts some background noise over NCS an public domain songs and releases them en masse.
That's quite annoying, for sure! On one hand, you have to hate copyright for it's absurd restrictions and guidelines, but, on the other hand, you could have people like Jincheng who steal music and take it as their own product.
@@user-ph3ji8gp3p public domain means you can do whatever you want with it, and since he is technically changing it by adding background noise, he is able to sell it as his own, it’s extremely scummy, but not illegal
I’ve had Shazam give me some interesting results when there is a lot of background noise. One time it identified a song as a track that sounded like someone recorded themselves taking a logic probe to data lines on an 8 bit computer or something. Certainly wasn’t the song I was trying to identify.
Yeah, this comes up a lot. Also, weird dark ambient and chinese rap. Shazam sometimes has trouble identifying even fully digital niche titles, like indie game and movie OSTs.
Those prices are accurate. That was the actual price they paid for them. That $1.75 record ($30+ today) was the standard rate for 12" records. Victor was a premium brand. They had the best available technology and they sounded excellent. Most 78s were in the $0.75-$1.00 range with cheaper brands in the $0.30 range. Like today, you get what you pay for.
I feel spoiled being able to go to a thrift store and buying a full alblem on cd for $0.50. though i do have to go on sunday or they will charge me $1.00
@@bland9876 New technology is always expensive. The very first CD players were multiple thousands in the early 80s. When those Victor records were made, they replaced extremely crude discs and cylinders that were bad even by 1890 standards. But it was new technology. Printed paper was the closest predecessor to the pre-recording era. The technology "jump" from the 19th century recordings to 1912 was almost as great as what we saw when the microgroove LP replaced the 78 in 1949. There's been a few watershed moments in recording. That was the first around 1908. The next would be 1925 when the vacuum tube was perfected and electronic amplifiers, microphones, recorders were developed. The microgroove vinyl records were next in 1949, then stereo in 1958. The next one was digital recording.
@@gunnarthefeisty That's true. Edison was not only 90% deaf and a great inventor, but one of the greatest recording engineers of all time. His disk and cylinder players used a proprietary diamond stylus shaped like a half of a clam shell. The groove was a concave "trench" and that stylus fit perfectly. The wide section gave the stylus wear resistance and the thin section enabled it to respond to high frequencies. That groove shape is why Edison players use a half-nut lead screw to pull the stylus along. Edison also believed recordings should be recorded in a dead room with no ambience. His idea was if it's recorded in a room that's acoustically "live", the ambience of the studio will be added to the ambience of the playback room, causing an inferior sounding playback. That's why Victor and other brands didn't sound as good. The downside to Edison recordings is Tom himself. Nothing got recorded without his express approval. If he didn't like the song it didn't get recorded. Tom's taste in music was outdated even by 1912 standards. (source: "From Tinfoil to Stereo", by Oliver Reed (c. 1959)
I tested it on old Russian music, performed by Varya Panina and Anastasia Vyaltseva, recorded in the beginning of XX century (about 1905). Some songs issued later on CDs were recognized. But songs not issued on CDs were not recognized at all.
because shazam only recognizes songs that were digitally upload and are in shazam s digital database. the question is not can shazam recognize its did the creators over at shazam put the song you are trying to recognize in shazam s database
When you started playing foxtrots and waltzes, I thought: I wonder if there’d be a difference if we played music that had remained more popular over the century that’s passed. So I tried it with Mamie Smith and the Original Dixieland Jazz Band, using recordings from 1920 and earlier. They were instantly recognised. Jazz and blues still has a following whereas foxtrots and waltzes are way more niche.
I use Soundhound for my music identifying app and it only found one of these songs. I have a huge feeling that these things are primarily geared towards popular music like 1957 and newer like you mentioned. They really should expand their libraries to include music like this as it is important to the landscape of music throughout time.
The apps themselves only exist to sell music. They always link to streaming services so they either make money directly or through referalls. The likelihood of anyone wanting to download and buy scratchy low-fi recordings from 100 year old records is low anyway, and I doubt Shazam itself holds the sound files being used to compare wavefiles. Not criticising the joy of playing these old records by the way, just being realistic!
@@PotatoPirate123 Very true. All about selling us all something for sure. Sad that they pose as something all about music when the history of music like this is not there.
Shazam is quite easy to beat especially if you're a dance music nerd! Also fox trot seems like it was the equivalent of house music back in the 1910s -1920s with so many fox trot variants of popular songs. Kinda like house remixes today but without the remix but a rerecord
I immediately had a feeling that Shazam really doesn't care about that old-timey music so much. And you said it. Enrico Caruso *_WAS_* the superstar of music back then. And the $2.00 is real. Holy cr@p! let's say that was 1916 when that record was put out, $2 in 1916 is worth $53.63 in 2022! For only one song!! And yes, double sided records before 1910 did exist. I still remember as a very young one back in the early 80's 1983 to be exact, finding hundreds of 78 RPM records in a dumpster. I was a kid and tried to save lots of them but having limited space and moving a lot they got lost. How I wish to go back in time to grab them all. They were in very good shiny condition too most in their paper sleeves. Most were from the 1910's to the mid 1940's. One I specifically remember, it was the oldest one and I loved, was Rossini, "The William Tell Overture" it was a blue label Columbia record, it was a 12" very heavy copyright year 1908. It was double sided. The piece of music continued on the other side. I broke it accidentally by holding it with my thumb and index finger by the very edge. I mentioned it was very heavy, and brittle. It snapped leaving me holding a chunk while 95% of the record dropped to the floor. 😯
If that record still cost two silver dollars, and it was still under copyright... Shazam would have recognised it in a second. But as both those things are no longer so.... it will never be recognised by Shazam. Why would it?
To be fair, i’d try shazaming songs playing on youtube and the app wouldn’t pick it up. There’s a quite talented japanese male singer named Yasuhide Sawa who’s most notable work was the theme song for “the Bushbaby, little angel from the grasslands” animated series based on the novels. Show was made in 1992 yet Yasuhide Sawa has nothing on him. I had to go digging to figure out who was the vocalist. And to my knowledge, this theme song is the only piece of music saved from his career. Nothing else shows up. Which is disappointing because he seemed to be quite notorious in japan. If a fairly large artist from barely 30 years ago is forgotten or erased, what does that say about any artists beyond that time, regardless of country of origin? Some countries are especially notorious for terrible media archives. :(
Hey! The reason it recognizes songs so quick is because it's listening before you even press the button. Most newer phone operating systems have a little indicator telling you when the microphone is used, and if you notice any time the Shazam app is open it is listening (Similar to how modern phones are constantly taking pictures with the camera app open, you pressing the shutter button just chooses the most recent one and combines it with nearby frames)
What blows my mind is that the 1920's was a century ago now. Seems like just yesterday that 100 years wouldve put you back in the mid-19th century. Really good music, by the way (thanks for showing the titles of each). I hope with the PD ruling we get a lot more of it on UA-cam now.
Five months later, I followed along with my copy of Shazam, and in addition to Ave Maria and Cavalleria Rusticana, it correctly identified 'Arabian Nights' (1918), 'Mother Machree' (1915), and 'A Little Bit Of Heaven' (1915). Whether that's simply because they're still expanding their catalogue, or because the app is getting better at ignoring the hiss and crackle of old records, or both, I don't know, but it seems to be improving.
I do know it’s getting a lot better at ignoring background noise seeing as I could pick up songs on the radio of a school bus and in a busy supermarket.
you would be inpressed to know that shazam doesn’t actually need the audio to know the song, it’s not an audio recognition software, but rather a fingerprint recognition system, it builds a spectrogram of songs and catalogues them, and when it “listens” to new songs, it actually converts the sample and start comparing it to its database, which means, the database just grows over time, and maybe the algorithm gets better, but shazam already knows how to deal with special echoing, compression, scratching noises as well as vinyl effects.
My experience is that shazam only recognises music from that era when it has been re-released later, on a compilation album for example. The only reason it got Heifetz and Caruso right is because those songs have been re-released. Click on them and it'll show you the album they're from.
It usually only identifies really well-known commercially released music - works best under the following conditions: It’s not treble-heavy or bass-heavy; The volume is quite loud on the speakers (might upset the neighbours, but it can’t be helped); You’re not listening on AM radio and you have other stations trying to creep in or you’re listening to a station from outside of your area - especially after dark - or listening on short wave; There’s not a lot of noise in the room, like a party or a vacuum cleaner or a washing machine or other background noise; It only identifies actual music recordings - not live concerts or stuff off the telly, or your old maiden aunt playing a piano - especially when she hits a bum note - or dad on the karaoke machine! He probably didn’t have them loud enough for the phone mic to pick up - or the speaker wasn’t all that loud!
I used to record a lot of music from FM radio in the 1970’s into the 1980’s. Many stations didn’t bother to announce the title of the songs and/or the artists. I have used Soundhound and Shazam and found that many songs are not found. The songs are not pre-1957 but, as others have commented, they weren’t “popular” or of a genre that the masses are interested in. So, I still have many songs in my Apple Music library entitled “Mystery Song”.
Imagine seeing these artist live. How they where back then. The mind takes you back in time, imagining the room , some cigar smoke, all dressed in the time period fashion... Just crazy. Voices from past.
Especially the end of WWI songs. They thought such a war could not happen again. But it did barely 20 years later. And they had no idea smoking was so harmful.
Foxtrot was indeed the most popular form of music back in this era, at least according to Wikipedia. It apparently even got applied to early rock and roll recordings, since they were generally 4/4 like foxtrot.
I wonder when the last time some of these recordings were heard? It's fascinating thinking that some of these may not have been heard since the 1920s. What a great and fun video.
I belive the last time they were heard of is somewhere in 1960-1980 when thos people who bought this music is becoming old and play it while enjoying their old age. Before they finnaly gone together with the listeners...
@@noobscoopsies1100 and it depends how many copies if they were very very small and only a few hundred produced the chances of one making it to 2022 and being listened since the 1920s is even rarer
It's a lovely question, and the answer may surprise you. Record collectors like me who started when they were little - and there are a lot of us - have been playing records like these all our lives. The generation that bought them gave them to us, as they were cleaning out their homes, or were upgrading to stereo and got these out of their basements/attics while they were at it as well. The ones shown here are fairly common, so they have been heard much more recently than you might think. As a full-time musician myself, I often wonder whether my predecessors gave any thought about their work being heard and enjoyed 100-plus years later. Now that it's been digitized (check out the Library of Congress' Digital Jukebox) their sounds will live on until the end of the world.
Just like music made in the 1930's , there are still fans of that era, and im sure there are still people alive today that had parents or grand parents that played these when they were wee babes.
I used to upload music from my 78 rpm record collection to UA-cam. The only time I ever got a content ID match was for a later remastered version of the recording. By arguing my original non-remastered upload was out of copyright, I won the claim.
Honestly would be a good idea to digitalize and distribute old no copyright records to Shazam/others so they can add them to the catalogue. They probably want more data for their systems.
Another one of your "how the heck did he come up with this idea?"-videos that I love so much. :) I suspect the main reason Shazam fails is that there are no modern reissues on digital format from which it can index them. It's no surprise that both Heifetz and Caruso were picked up instantly since they have been reissued digitally countless times. Pretty sure Shazam will fail on any analog-only recordings no matter when it was released, but I haven't extensively tested it. Anyway, I enjoyed some fine old tunes! Keep up the splendid work, especially if it involves vintage music.
@@jamescollins6085 Its highly unlikely. Shazam doesn't use the literal song to create a match, instead using a songs "hash". Shazam can match over 15 Billion songs, while apple music has 90 million. Your friend probably said that as Shazam is owned by Apple and usually shows Apple Music as the default option to listen to the song you just Shazamed. For instance if you Shazamed an Amazon exclusive song, Shazam would detect it, but it won't give you the option to listen to it on AM. Cheers
@@jamescollins6085 I have some music released, and I can choose where it goes, Spotify, Amazon, Deezer, etc. I have to separately select Shazam as well, so that would suggest they don't get their data automatically from another source. I can also leave out Apple Music and still check Shazam, so they wouldn't be able to use Apple as a source then.
Many of these pieces are so rare that even big streaming services like Spotify or Amazon don't have them, so it's not surprising Shazam doesn't have them indexed either.
It doesn't have to be old. The majority of music from around the world (1950-2020) isn't on those corporate sites if that wasn't mainstream in yankland. A huge amount of top 40 in my country from my teens and twenties is nowhere to be found. You'd think it doesn't exist if you had to depend on Stealify.
As always, a very interesting, entertaining and informative video. I enjoyed this as always. However, in regards to the Victrola/Victor recordings, RCA Victor/Records had a warehouse in Camden NJ until the mid 1960's. The warehouse was demolished around that time, but before demolition of the warehouse commenced, they gave many record collectors a chance to salvage what they could for their personal collections. The warehouse contained many metal masters, test discs, promotional discs and many other types of recordings. When the demolition began, there were still many more master recordings in the building and after the demolition, the remaining masters were bulldozed into the Delaware River, with a pier subsequently built over them. Most of the masters that were bulldozed were that of Sergei Rachmanioff, who was one of the 20th Century's leading composers. When RCA Victor wanted to create a set of his complete recordings in 1973, the label had to search out collectors for more of his recordings as their list of them was incomplete. However, many masters that RCA Victor/Records considered very important were saved, such as Caruso's, Toscanini's, Gershwin's and Jimmie Rodgers, but why they didn't save Rachmaninoff's masters is a mystery indeed as he too was very important. I think that the best way for Shazam to recognize the recordings that weren't recognized is that whoever owns the rights to these masters to digitize them and make the available for purchase as downloads on a music downloading site, where you pay a small price for the song so a listener can have the song in their digital library. Thanks again. Looking forward to more.
Double sided records were introduced in about 1906, and everyone followed, but Victor retained their "Red Seal" label for prestige titles by well known artists, and priced them accordingly. They kept them single sided to remind the public of their higher class status. Other color labels from Victor signified a different kind of music, and were often priced lower. Victor maintained the one sided status of their "Red Seal" records well into the 1920s.
Several years ago, I bought an Empire floor-standing gramophone player from a vendor at a local antiques mall and the vendor, a kind elderly woman, gave me 73 78 rpm records for free the next day and many of those were fun, quaint fox-trots from the 1920's. :)
Those photos @10:00 are cool. I didn't really know how they recorded these records back then. To see how it was done in it's most primitive form is very cool!
I’m about positive I’ve heard some of those - including the very last one -before. Anyway, I really liked “A little bit of heaven”, the guy had an amazing voice. I’ve been trying to find it somewhere online, but don’t seem to be able to? Anyway, this video was really cool. I’m glad you made it.
Shazam sometimes works for pre-WW2 records in case the (former) copyright owner invests into a modern or a re-issue album, containing the original sound, perhaps also de-hissed and de-clicked, and made it public. As an example, some records that were popular in the former Czechoslovakia in the 1930s under long-forgotten brands such as Ultraphon or Esta, can be detected as a Supraphon (which still exists to this day), album "Historie psaná šelakem" (The Shellac Time) - "edice Esta" (Esta release). For even older records though, which are in the public domain and were never publicly "remastered" on a modern reissue, it's another story as you can tell. And I be damned if you got a Content ID match whilst playing back a wax cylinder on an antique Edison phonograph :)
None since these are all public domain and the whole point around content matches is that the copyright holders felt that that your video is definitely going to impede sales badly enough to issue a notice strongarming to cut out the section of the video or face getting a strike and worse having you're entire taken down because some greedy fuck wanted to squeeze as much money out of everyone they possibly could as humanly possible.
@@TheCatLady65 I've had copyright notices for public domain recordings of classical music. If it's public domain, someone can just take it and claim copyright. Most people might not know about the copyright status, so they'll leave it, and others will just contest the claim, which is then usually released within minutes. And yes, claiming copyright when they don't actually own the copyright is illegal, but who's going to spend that much time and money on something that didn't really affect them that much?
It sometimes needs 3 or 5 times to recognize a song Edit: my experience: using it since it first came out, it improved a lot. But I was annoyed it couldnt find a song I desperately wanted to know. After 4 years I found it by myself, using the title of the wrong song. If it wasnt for me, it would still shazam a completely different and nonsense song.
I have practically evey one you have played...started collecting these old "classics" back in 1963...they were had for give-away prices back then...now very hard to find in the "everyday" world. My late dad, being in the radio/tv service business brought home boxes of these records from families who no longer wanted them! Art Hickman had his start in San Francisco in 1918...my hometown. Back then, people would have Victrola Dance Parties at home...the dance music was a hot item. 1918...the start of the "Spanish Flu Pandemic"...and my parents birth year. The $1.50 price is the original selling value! So many of these vintage numbers are lost in time. Tenor John McCormack's "A Little Bit of heaven" was nearly a million dollar seller. All these label prices are the original over the counter value. Caruso's Red Seals commanded that price! He was the first Victor Recording artist under that company's contract.
UA-cam's auto music thingy says it found "Cavalleria Rusticana", and I'm curious, did that affect the monetization of this video, now that it should be in the public domain?
"Fox trot" is old record label code for "we never figured out the exact dance for this one, so it's going in the one-size-fits-all pile." The Raymond Scott Quintet's "Powerhouse" is listed as a fox trot, too. Try it sometime. :)
Definitley not, it's almost like a longing for retrieving a memory from a life you probably never lived. On the off chance you actually have past lives, who knows?
Victrola records were the prestige label from the Victor Company, and yes, they were made long after double-sided discs were universally being sold. Being more highbrow and featuring opera and classical singers, they cost a lot more and only had one song per side. Alma Gluck did a lot of Victrola records. She was the mother of a well-known mid-20th century actor named Efrem Zimbalist Jr. who did a lot of TV work.
These songs are pretty great. It's interesting to see what level shazam is indexing music apparently not from the twenty's. I wonder if just using streaming services to index or if it has another database.
It's not surprising that it recognized Heifetz and Caruso, both of whom are still recognized as masters and have numerous CD releases of their music. Early Classical music is in demand, too. It would be interesting to pick up one of the Archeophone Audio Yearbook CDs, which takes the tops tracks from each year (roughly 1905-1922 so far), and see if Shazam recognizes one of those tracks. Frankly, I doubt any of the other discs you played have ever been commercially digitized, so why would Shazam know them? As a lover of old music and old books, though, I do chuckle at how badly the various services do at catering to my tastes and providing recommendations.
A lot of futurists of the day imagined thinking boxes that we could speak to and which could remember and recall things for us… but I think _even they_ would be surprised by how light and commonplace these computation slabs we all have are!
@@kaitlyn__L I’m only 39 and I’m still amazed by the stuff we have now like a portable computer in my pocket with our phones that we take for granted. I can’t imagine what the world will be like if I make it to 90.
@@mikeg2491 yes! I’m 27 so I saw PDAs go from glorified calculators to, well, powerful smartphones that are replacing computers for many people. But I can only imagine how exciting the first portable calculator boom was. (Though of course that was before you were born too!) I sure hope I can see as much of where we’re going as possible.
A Little Bit of Heaven sounds like it might’ve been sung by a Scotsman, where indeed tapped and rolled Rs are still a thing! His singing delivery reminded me a bit of Ivor Cutler, albeit nowhere near as silly as Cutler. Of course I can’t be bothered to look up the artist printed on the record label even though it would’ve taken less time than writing this comment :)
Besides some minor mispronunciations, good video. Also thanks a lot of new good listening material for me since this is the era I listen to for regular music. It doesn’t shock me that these modern music identifiers haven’t the slightest notion of the music from the ragtime and early jazz period. Also Fox-Trot basically was their go to term to represent Jazz or Dance music, you’ll also see a lot of One-Steps or Two-Steps around from then aswell. And yes $1.50 to $2 and sometimes even $3 were indeed the prices of those 12 inch 78s, and 75¢ was standard pricing for 10 inch 78s. Aeolian Vocalion was originally more expensive because at that time they weren’t very big and they needed to make a profit. I also would like to note here that there are many many 78s from this era that sound stunningly clear, the earliest clear recording I have is from 1906. Lastly Columbia introduced the double-sided disc in 1908, and Victor followed in 1910. The latest single-sided discs were Victor’s Victrola Red Seal foreign series (of which you featured a few here), to my knowledge they had single-sided discs all the way up to the introduction of the electrical process recording in 1925. Another interesting use of late single-sided recordings was done through Sears & Roebuck under the auspices of their record brand Silvertone, which opened in 1916 on contract to reissue some turn of the century (ie 1901, 02, 03, & 04) Columbia masters.
Shazam most likely uses a digital archive such as Spotify, Apple Music or UA-cam Music to categorize music, that is also confirmed to be accurately labeled. So usually something that exists on these platforms will be identified.
I keep on hearing on one of my Facebook radio hobby groups that short wave radio listeners listen to WBCQ on 7.490 MHz on the 41 meter band that they air music like this and also recordings from cylinder recordings. Be sure to check it out on that 5 core receiver you have laying around or that International Stereo system with the LW-MW-SW and FM bands.
@@noncounterproductive4596 A transvestite host? An interesting detail, but not quite valid in this context. We're here to discuss music, not people's personal preference in physical self-expression.
It's a bit surprising that My Buddy, Loveless Love [also known as Careless Love] and Japanese Sandman did not register: all of them had many further recordings for some decades after. Does Shazam identify music or specific performances?
shazam from my experience identifies specific performances, I never get covers identified. Google on the other hand tries to mainly identify songs but not always which version specifically
Ave Maria did'nt surprise me, it's was very popular and a lot of bands have covered it. That recording of Cavalleria Rusticana was re-released in the 80's on the Best of Caruso 8-Track, complete with clicks and spots. :)
That's a pretty tough challenge. In a less obscure, but still challenging vein, I have been surprised by Shazam's success rate with 1950's classical recordings, even on lesser known European labels. It usually gets the orchestra, date and performers, so someone has done a lot of inventory work in making the algorithm what it is. Congratulations on your 78RPM reproduction results. Sounds pretty good!
*Something interesting about the app is that along the way in the last years I have collected few phones that needed to be upgraded with another one and in every time I have installed many apps including Shazam and SoundHound but I never care to update those apps because I felt they were working just fine and while doing that I used different apps versions from my old phones to identify some songs that I was interested to find, some versions found it while some others kept bouncing back with the same "not found" message but some versions definitely they will, including SoundHound*
I have Shazam too, but no music that old to test it out. My Mother was 12 in December 1922. She told me in the latter 1920's, she was a Flapper, and in Europe was a fashion model in the late 1920's and early 1930's, going to Paris, Milan, and Berlin, back in the Cabarat days, before she met my Father in 1937 in Zurich, Switzerland 🇨🇭 where she was from. I remember the 78's when I was younger, before the modern LP's came out in late 1950's. Also, downtown Manhattan, NYC, had stores with the old records for sale, when I was working down there in the 1970's.
I’m surprised Billy Murray wasn’t recognized since not only are his records prominent on UA-cam (even I have a Murray upload) and have been reissued, but the US Library of Congress has also archived his music.
I got a reply in the notifications, but either it's deleted or the comment i replied on is gone. There was no highlighted comment or reply, so the comment must have been deleted.
Really interesting video as always, thanks! I use Shazam all the time to help DXing radio stations and I'm always shocked just how much noise and interference can be in the sound and Shazam will still get it. Sometimes Shazam will pick out a song I enjoy and know well faster than I can recognize it through the noise. Also, I believe Shazam has a small 2-3 second buffer of audio that it holds before you press the Shazam button that it'll upload in addition to the audio after you press the button. This helps it feel a bit faster and more instant than it really is, but it's still really impressive regardless. I know this because if I switch stations and immediately hit the Shazam button, it'll pick up the song from the previous station unless I give it a few seconds, haha.
I know a lot of the music from this period and most of these are pretty obscure. "My Buddy" and "Japanese Sandman" were big hits, so maybe if the software could identify the tunes instead of a specific recording it should get those. Ernie Hare was one of the famous "Happiness Boys", teamed with Billy Jones. They were one of the first acts to make it big on radio. "I Makes Mine Myself" refers to home brewing or distilling in the days of prohibition, and he's doing an imitation of Bert Williams, a black recording & stage star who had died recently. Isham Jones is actually pronounce "Eye-sham", and they were one of the most popular dance bands of the period. Rudy Wiedhoff was the one who popularized the saxophone, so he was also a very big star of the time, now forgotten. Also, in those days, if it was 3/4 time it was a waltz. Everything 4/4 time was labelled fox trot. 2/4 time would be labelled "march". Before 1920 you might also have "schottisches" or "polkas".
With these musical selections in the public domain, nobody can claim copyrights on them at all. If they record a new performance of these songs, that recording can be copyrighted but not these original recordings.
the early American Zonophone records of 1904 to 1906 were of a completely different type of shellac the strange thing is that it degrades and forms pock marks almost like mold we see on wax cylinders also it's light-sensitive and light exposure will make the black shellac turn brown over time.
@@Balrog-tf3bg well if you have the title of the tune I have 25000 digital sound files many of them wax cylinders so we could see if another copy of your cylinder exists. my mail info is under each of my videos on my channels just type tino van der zwan and you'll find the 2 channels.
I'm actually rather surprised at how Shazam was able to pick up a few of them! And, yeah, some of the stuff they managed to pull off before microphones is just incredible!
Hiefitz and Caruso were great artists whose early recodings have mostly been re-issued on CDs and these were probably fed into Shazam's database. I doubt if anything that did not get onto CD will be matched. Apart from anything else the variations in surface noise when cataloging old 78 material would be hard work for the algoriths to work around!
Back in the day, the hyperbole used to sell them claimed: "You cannot distinguish the recording playing from the actual live performance of the singers!"
I'm really glad to see you got this video reinstated by prevailing against Sony, even if UA-cam deleted all the comments. Edit: It says 16 comments total, but they all do seem to be there. Wow UA-cam sure is broken sometimes!
I wonder if anyone thought when they bought those records that they would still be around 100+ years in the future. The fact that these records last if stored well for later generations to discover. I have the Victor 18995 "My Buddy" record but yours is really nice shape compared to mine.
heifetz is arguably one of the most famous and possibly also the best violinist of the 20th century. i would have been astounded if the app did not identify him.
Double-sided records became the standard in 1908. Victor kept their high-priced and prestigious Red Seal discs single sided because... they could. Owning them was something of a status symbol. Victor switched them to double-sided in 1923.
It strikes me as very likely that if an acoustically-recorded performance was not considered by the rights-holder as worthy of re-pressing after the advent of electrical transcription (versus simply re-recording a cover performance in higher fidelity and at a standardized speed), that it would have been more easily forgotten or abandoned by said rights-holder as lower priority for integration into an intellectual property portfolio, especially as reproduction rights for the recordings were consolidated and re-consolidated by larger and larger recording houses / rights-holding entities over time, yielding the handful of monolithic IP portfolios we see today which are indexed by services like Shazam
im more interested in hearing these old recordings and thinking how everthing was so different then...i think of myself being back in those days...it is facsinating!!
The Google Pixel 6 and 6 Pro have a feature called "now playing" which can automatically identify music without needing an external app like Shazam. I tend to use it on my Pixel 6 a lot and it recognises basically everything I throw at it
@hd01 it's not a widget, it's always running on the lockscreen so if you go on a night out it will recognize every song playing in the background on your night out, and you can refer to this 'tracklist' the next day. It's an offline system so uses no live data stream to cross-reference. I assume it updates regularly over wi-fi. You can press the power button on your phone at any time and it'll tell you what's playing now. It's really quite a cool features
This has been a standard Android/Google feature for almost a decade now in one form, or another, and at one point before Google removed it, you could even hold up your phone/tablet near your TV speakers, and it would identify what show was playing on your TV getting it right about 60% of the time from my testing on normal shows, but usually not things like UA-cam, etc.. which is understandable with how much content is put out everyday.
*February 2023 update:* "Arabian Nights", "Mother Machree", and "A Little Bit of Heaven" are now correctly identified by Shazam, and "Sand Dunes" now yields no result instead of an incorrect result. So in addition to "Ave Maria" and "Cavalleria Rusticana", it can now correctly identify five out of the 25 songs I played.
Where can i find loveless love by ernest hare? Please record the full song, been trying to find it everywhere, its a lovely tune.
Can we get more of that loveless love ernest hare song? Please? I saw you put the i makes mine myself mine one why not loveless love?
@@InternetTransfers I don't have a copy of it at the moment, but I did upload a copy of the flip side, "I Makes Mine Myself", on my vwest1ife channel.
@@vwestlife oh okay, will you upload it whenever you get it back or find it?
I would not be surprised if the only algorithm that can easily identify music from 1922 and earlier is UA-cam's content ID match for that sweet licensing money. Public domain is not in the vocabulary of the music industry or Google.
Now going to see if I can find my dad's 78 of The Runaway Train and The Bum Song, that I used to listen to all the time even into my teenage years; and see if either Shazam or UA-cam can identify them.
It is too bad the one that we used to call the Chinese Music Torture got broken decades ago...
Fun Fact: That is exactly what happened. Look in the video description and a "Music in this video" part will appear.
One can dispute matches to UA-cam, and I have when it was me playing the song.
I think it's really just a matter of whether or not the song is indexed in Shazam's database, more than having anything to do with the effectiveness of the algorithm.
They seem to have claimed it. Many countries have laws, that say that the copyright will expire after 50-100 years after the dead. This means that early recordings from ABBA will not expire till at least 75 years from now (with German law), while Avicii works will probably expire even before ABBA works, in 2093.
I generally think that the way they do it in the US sometimes is better, but sometimes can cause unfortunate things to happen. If you want to do things like in the video, you should consider laws of other countries (my audience is like 20% German, 10% Indonesian, 10% Brazilian and 20% UK, with the rest being other countries for example).
For being over 100 years old, those 78's sound pretty alright.
No They Dont, They Would Sound Better If He Would Spraay Some Water On Them When Listening
@@krisraps true
@@krisraps trust me, it could be way worse. this is relatively good quality. remember there have been steel needles over it in its first years.
@@krisraps nah, the bad quality and the little static noise makes it sounds, nostalgic in a way
no it isn't, people are just blinded by nostalgia.
Shazam is fairly easy to out fox, it's a drinking game with my friends. I find most underground 90's rave tunes can easily defeat it.
I’ve done it with a lot of early gabber stuff 92-99 and it seems to pick it up fine for most of them even terrorcore, breakbeat. I’ve also had the same luck with internet genre’s like future funk.
I tried to Shazam a song that was recorded onto an audio cassette. It was a Nicaraguan station and found at least two songs that Shazam could not figure out.
Shazam doesn't recognize a lot of Slovak songs, it's probably the same for other small countries
Same. It's useless for me, half the time I'm searching for something obscure enough to get no matches anyway
I'd think it is a bit difficult and would bring up multiple results perhaps with some more modern music, not least because of multiple samples but also the reuse of tunes and 'phrases' in a lot of them. Just a thought!
Imagine how many bangers there used to be from the early 1900s that were never heard again because the people who owned the records either lost them or broke them, or they were just never recorded at all.
The problem is a LOT of these acoustics are damn obscure even to a collector like me! I didn't recognize half the titles, but more popular stuff like Paul Whiteman or Billy Murray would be recognized by the software.
That doesn't matter if the music has been ID'd, some obscure stuff will be monetized when uploaded to youtube so it will also be picked up by shazam
@@25566 But everything before 1923 is now copyright free and un-monetizeable. So only stuff that was monetized before 2022 would be recognized by Shazam, nothing new is getting in there.
i am surprised my grandma still has these laying aroumd
Yeah this isn't a problem with Shazam's ability to match old music, it's a problem with old music's ability to be popular enough to be in the database Shazam accesses.
@@gunnarthefeisty What if they were to change one note and re record it? wouldn't that start it all over again. just curious.
I did the same experiment with my 78s. Shazam didn't recognize Irving Berlin's "Cheek to Cheek" from the movie "Top Hat" with Fred Astaire, issued in 1936. It did, however manage to pick up the rather obscure "Sing Mit Mir" by Lutz Templin's orchestra from 1943, "Glutrote Rosen" by Rudi Schuricke fron 1942, as well as two other German songs from the same time. Conclusion: Shazam knows its WWII-era German schlagers.
as for 38
Talking about german stuff, i got my first turntable, a Technics SL-BD20D, and the dude that i got it from gave me a bunch of... schlagers to go with it :D ... Furthermore, every Sunday, there's a local market where people sell stuff, like produce, clothing and footwear and various other stuff. There's this dude that sells various tools and stuff, electronic or mechanic knic-knacks.. He also has a crate of .... MORE SCHLAGERS :D
@@koushiroizumi0 9oooo
That's sus ngl
Just means someone did the due diligence of adding those old tracks to some databases.
Music from 1995 and older can be hard to recognize if the artist wasn't big. 1993 and older techno artists can be missunderstod often for anoter artists or not found.
I'd say that the digital music archives in general is still very lackning, as well in movies.
Even contemporary electronic music is often tricky for Shazam!
This brings me comfort for some reason, good to hear.
It's also completely useless for classical. It may identify the work, but never the performer.
@@defcreator187 each to there own taste. But Shazam have helped me discover new artists now and again Now No listening to it i prefer Cassette or Viny, and even Minidisk and CD sometimes but rarer. 👌.
@@defcreator187 Can't find the vinyl if you can't find out what's the song and artist....
So idk if anyone mentioned it but Shazam has a database that's typically linked with distributors. Whenever a musician uploads a song in order to get on online stores or streaming services, most of the time they have the chance to add it to the Shazam database. Now, if the song is never added to the database, Shazam won't recognize it. This makes sense when it comes to older records because everyone involved with the records is dead and, unless they were (and still are) big artists like Louis Armstrong, chances are no one cared enough to add those songs to the database.
So technically it's not Shazam's fault, mainly just people not conserving records (but even that is a complex process cause you'd have to go through record labels)
That was the comment that I want do read. Searching for a song that is not in the Shazam's database is completely ridiculous. The songs that Shazam finds are currently on Spotify. The waves coming out of this device are hardcore analog waves. It is almost impossible for shazam not to recognize these songs. So Shazam has a 100% success rate.
@@petersteele7503 "Shazam has a 100% success rate for songs it knows" me too, I can recognize every song I know. Did that sound stupid? That's how your statement sounds
So how would someone get there music uploaded? Who’d be the surviving people to take care of this? Also, what about copyrights that are extremely old and still valid today, but whose people that care about it are dead? Can it even be enforced?
@@wolfattacker1 If the copyright is privately owned they can be enforced by their estate, but it's quite likely their estate doesn't care or, in many cases, doesn't even know about the copyrights copyrights; however, most were owned by labels and the either merged or were bought out. Sony owned the copyrights to most these songs (acquired from RCA who had owned most of them since the 20's) before they entered the public domain.
the records are conserved, you can listen to most of these on Library of Congress National Jukebox collection...its just that Shazam doesn't prioritize integrating this into their database because nobody cares
There is a thing that makes my blood boil with shazam and other music identifiers. Lots of NCSs and public domain songs are getting identified as songs by Jincheng Zhang a known music thief. He just puts some background noise over NCS an public domain songs and releases them en masse.
That's so frustrating!
That's quite annoying, for sure!
On one hand, you have to hate copyright for it's absurd restrictions and guidelines, but, on the other hand, you could have people like Jincheng who steal music and take it as their own product.
@@user-ph3ji8gp3p public domain means you can do whatever you want with it, and since he is technically changing it by adding background noise, he is able to sell it as his own, it’s extremely scummy, but not illegal
That's the Chinese for ya. Always being obnoxious.
This was a great trip down memory lane! Not _my_ memories, of course, but someone's, I'm sure. And what lovely memories they must be.
Eso es Todo 👍 you have an ear for good music. i'm a sucker for the needle sound
I can't believe it's just a *BURNING MEMOOORYYY!!*
I’ve had Shazam give me some interesting results when there is a lot of background noise. One time it identified a song as a track that sounded like someone recorded themselves taking a logic probe to data lines on an 8 bit computer or something. Certainly wasn’t the song I was trying to identify.
Yeah, this comes up a lot. Also, weird dark ambient and chinese rap.
Shazam sometimes has trouble identifying even fully digital niche titles, like indie game and movie OSTs.
Name
I stopped in a traffic light and Shazan did the job to recognize the music coming from the neighbor's car!!! :D
@@JuanPabloRojasW cool!
@@dannadx3840 just use the google assistant it's way better you can also hum or sing the song they still finding it
Those prices are accurate. That was the actual price they paid for them. That $1.75 record ($30+ today) was the standard rate for 12" records. Victor was a premium brand. They had the best available technology and they sounded excellent.
Most 78s were in the $0.75-$1.00 range with cheaper brands in the $0.30 range. Like today, you get what you pay for.
I feel spoiled being able to go to a thrift store and buying a full alblem on cd for $0.50. though i do have to go on sunday or they will charge me $1.00
@@bland9876
New technology is always expensive. The very first CD players were multiple thousands in the early 80s.
When those Victor records were made, they replaced extremely crude discs and cylinders that were bad even by 1890 standards. But it was new technology. Printed paper was the closest predecessor to the pre-recording era. The technology "jump" from the 19th century recordings to 1912 was almost as great as what we saw when the microgroove LP replaced the 78 in 1949.
There's been a few watershed moments in recording. That was the first around 1908. The next would be 1925 when the vacuum tube was perfected and electronic amplifiers, microphones, recorders were developed. The microgroove vinyl records were next in 1949, then stereo in 1958. The next one was digital recording.
Edison beat out Victor in sound quality
@@gunnarthefeisty
That's true. Edison was not only 90% deaf and a great inventor, but one of the greatest recording engineers of all time. His disk and cylinder players used a proprietary diamond stylus shaped like a half of a clam shell. The groove was a concave "trench" and that stylus fit perfectly. The wide section gave the stylus wear resistance and the thin section enabled it to respond to high frequencies. That groove shape is why Edison players use a half-nut lead screw to pull the stylus along.
Edison also believed recordings should be recorded in a dead room with no ambience. His idea was if it's recorded in a room that's acoustically "live", the ambience of the studio will be added to the ambience of the playback room, causing an inferior sounding playback. That's why Victor and other brands didn't sound as good.
The downside to Edison recordings is Tom himself. Nothing got recorded without his express approval. If he didn't like the song it didn't get recorded. Tom's taste in music was outdated even by 1912 standards.
(source: "From Tinfoil to Stereo", by Oliver Reed (c. 1959)
@@Iconoclasher He loosened his influence throughout the 20s and was basically done overseeing by 1925. But, too late to save the label.
I tested it on old Russian music, performed by Varya Panina and Anastasia Vyaltseva, recorded in the beginning of XX century (about 1905). Some songs issued later on CDs were recognized. But songs not issued on CDs were not recognized at all.
because shazam only recognizes songs that were digitally upload and are in shazam s digital database. the question is not can shazam recognize its did the creators over at shazam put the song you are trying to recognize in shazam s database
When you started playing foxtrots and waltzes, I thought: I wonder if there’d be a difference if we played music that had remained more popular over the century that’s passed. So I tried it with Mamie Smith and the Original Dixieland Jazz Band, using recordings from 1920 and earlier. They were instantly recognised. Jazz and blues still has a following whereas foxtrots and waltzes are way more niche.
still
I use Soundhound for my music identifying app and it only found one of these songs. I have a huge feeling that these things are primarily geared towards popular music like 1957 and newer like you mentioned. They really should expand their libraries to include music like this as it is important to the landscape of music throughout time.
The apps themselves only exist to sell music. They always link to streaming services so they either make money directly or through referalls. The likelihood of anyone wanting to download and buy scratchy low-fi recordings from 100 year old records is low anyway, and I doubt Shazam itself holds the sound files being used to compare wavefiles.
Not criticising the joy of playing these old records by the way, just being realistic!
@@PotatoPirate123 Very true. All about selling us all something for sure. Sad that they pose as something all about music when the history of music like this is not there.
There's no money in it especially now as the copyright ended. Nobody does anything anymore except for money, and I hate it.
Hopefully soon Shazam will recognise all the music Apple streams, rents or sells.
@@avigdonable I'm pretty sure it already does
Shazam is quite easy to beat especially if you're a dance music nerd!
Also fox trot seems like it was the equivalent of house music back in the 1910s -1920s with so many fox trot variants of popular songs. Kinda like house remixes today but without the remix but a rerecord
I guess you could say it.
Foxtrot was a dance step, not a variant. Most popular records and sheet music specified foxtrot, one step etc.
I immediately had a feeling that Shazam really doesn't care about that old-timey music so much. And you said it. Enrico Caruso *_WAS_* the superstar of music back then. And the $2.00 is real. Holy cr@p! let's say that was 1916 when that record was put out, $2 in 1916 is worth $53.63 in 2022! For only one song!!
And yes, double sided records before 1910 did exist. I still remember as a very young one back in the early 80's 1983 to be exact, finding hundreds of 78 RPM records in a dumpster. I was a kid and tried to save lots of them but having limited space and moving a lot they got lost. How I wish to go back in time to grab them all. They were in very good shiny condition too most in their paper sleeves. Most were from the 1910's to the mid 1940's.
One I specifically remember, it was the oldest one and I loved, was Rossini, "The William Tell Overture" it was a blue label Columbia record, it was a 12" very heavy copyright year 1908. It was double sided. The piece of music continued on the other side. I broke it accidentally by holding it with my thumb and index finger by the very edge. I mentioned it was very heavy, and brittle. It snapped leaving me holding a chunk while 95% of the record dropped to the floor. 😯
If that record still cost two silver dollars, and it was still under copyright... Shazam would have recognised it in a second. But as both those things are no longer so.... it will never be recognised by Shazam. Why would it?
I hope they gave $2 to people for listening to that droney, monotonous sounds - calling it music would actually be far too favorable.
It was sad to find that happen to a 78 you loved that fall out of your hands.
@@graealex rude.
I know. Just joshing around.
I would not be surprised if he still got a copyright strike from this video. The music industry really do love pushing their luck..
To be fair, i’d try shazaming songs playing on youtube and the app wouldn’t pick it up. There’s a quite talented japanese male singer named Yasuhide Sawa who’s most notable work was the theme song for “the Bushbaby, little angel from the grasslands” animated series based on the novels. Show was made in 1992 yet Yasuhide Sawa has nothing on him. I had to go digging to figure out who was the vocalist. And to my knowledge, this theme song is the only piece of music saved from his career. Nothing else shows up. Which is disappointing because he seemed to be quite notorious in japan. If a fairly large artist from barely 30 years ago is forgotten or erased, what does that say about any artists beyond that time, regardless of country of origin? Some countries are especially notorious for terrible media archives. :(
The copyright law situation is disgusting. It should take as long for content to enter public domain as it takes for a patent to expire.
Of course, for drugs made using recombitant DNA methods, they’re stretching out patent protection…
@@markiangooley I find it disgusting that a cure for cancer would get 20 years while copy right protection is getting close to 100 years.
@@jmd1743 clearly tailoring the law to the years of music that are popular and profitable today is what is baffling to me
Copyright should void as soon as the owner refuses to publish or sell copies.
Glad I'm not the only one who cares about this..
Hey! The reason it recognizes songs so quick is because it's listening before you even press the button.
Most newer phone operating systems have a little indicator telling you when the microphone is used, and if you notice any time the Shazam app is open it is listening
(Similar to how modern phones are constantly taking pictures with the camera app open, you pressing the shutter button just chooses the most recent one and combines it with nearby frames)
Thats creepy af
very... 😰
😨
Makes sense it’s the most efficient way to do it
weird
I have been listening to the 1920s radio network for about 15 years now, so this selection is very nice. Thanks for the video.
So, you're almost in the 1940s now? 😁
Agree, 1920's radio network is amazing!
bro just watch tom and jerry
Do you listen to Al Bowlly?
No iq moment
What blows my mind is that the 1920's was a century ago now. Seems like just yesterday that 100 years wouldve put you back in the mid-19th century. Really good music, by the way (thanks for showing the titles of each). I hope with the PD ruling we get a lot more of it on UA-cam now.
Five months later, I followed along with my copy of Shazam, and in addition to Ave Maria and Cavalleria Rusticana, it correctly identified 'Arabian Nights' (1918), 'Mother Machree' (1915), and 'A Little Bit Of Heaven' (1915). Whether that's simply because they're still expanding their catalogue, or because the app is getting better at ignoring the hiss and crackle of old records, or both, I don't know, but it seems to be improving.
It never found abarian nights
I do know it’s getting a lot better at ignoring background noise seeing as I could pick up songs on the radio of a school bus and in a busy supermarket.
I also just tried it and also got both Charles Harrison songs along with Arabian Nights and the ones collected in the video
you would be inpressed to know that shazam doesn’t actually need the audio to know the song, it’s not an audio recognition software, but rather a fingerprint recognition system, it builds a spectrogram of songs and catalogues them, and when it “listens” to new songs, it actually converts the sample and start comparing it to its database, which means, the database just grows over time, and maybe the algorithm gets better, but shazam already knows how to deal with special echoing, compression, scratching noises as well as vinyl effects.
@@at_oussama I *am* impressed! Thanks.
My experience is that shazam only recognises music from that era when it has been re-released later, on a compilation album for example.
The only reason it got Heifetz and Caruso right is because those songs have been re-released. Click on them and it'll show you the album they're from.
I'm sure Caruso's tracks saw re-issues on vinyl, tape and CD.
It usually only identifies really well-known commercially released music - works best under the following conditions:
It’s not treble-heavy or bass-heavy;
The volume is quite loud on the speakers (might upset the neighbours, but it can’t be helped);
You’re not listening on AM radio and you have other stations trying to creep in or you’re listening to a station from outside of your area - especially after dark - or listening on short wave;
There’s not a lot of noise in the room, like a party or a vacuum cleaner or a washing machine or other background noise;
It only identifies actual music recordings - not live concerts or stuff off the telly, or your old maiden aunt playing a piano - especially when she hits a bum note - or dad on the karaoke machine!
He probably didn’t have them loud enough for the phone mic to pick up - or the speaker wasn’t all that loud!
I used to record a lot of music from FM radio in the 1970’s into the 1980’s. Many stations didn’t bother to announce the title of the songs and/or the artists. I have used Soundhound and Shazam and found that many songs are not found. The songs are not pre-1957 but, as others have commented, they weren’t “popular” or of a genre that the masses are interested in. So, I still have many songs in my Apple Music library entitled “Mystery Song”.
If you post a few, i bet either content id or an old head will clue you in.
_Check it in, check it out, but the sun will never shiiiiiine..._
Google the lyrics of the chorus. Plus I have never heard a song that doesn't repeatedly say its title, typically in the chorus.
@@dlarge6502 so you've never heard Bohemian Rhapsody?
ap*ple
Imagine seeing these artist live. How they where back then. The mind takes you back in time, imagining the room , some cigar smoke, all dressed in the time period fashion... Just crazy. Voices from past.
True. These people just had simple lives and wonderful advances with what was happening.
Especially the end of WWI songs. They thought such a war could not happen again. But it did barely 20 years later. And they had no idea smoking was so harmful.
And hearing Heifetz live would be better than any contemporary violinist. No offence 2set, lol.
Ikr I'm traveling there with each vinyl he plays
@@YTAliasJoeCool oh I'm sure Brett and Eddy would agree!
Man, When Winter Comes hits hard, wish it was on youtube as pure music so I could listen to it, it is public domain after all.
When Winter Comes was a hugely popular novel of the time, so I guess that's where they got the idea for the song.
Foxtrot was indeed the most popular form of music back in this era, at least according to Wikipedia. It apparently even got applied to early rock and roll recordings, since they were generally 4/4 like foxtrot.
I wonder when the last time some of these recordings were heard? It's fascinating thinking that some of these may not have been heard since the 1920s. What a great and fun video.
Very VERY unlikely.
I belive the last time they were heard of is somewhere in 1960-1980 when thos people who bought this music is becoming old and play it while enjoying their old age. Before they finnaly gone together with the listeners...
@@noobscoopsies1100 and it depends how many copies if they were very very small and only a few hundred produced the chances of one making it to 2022 and being listened since the 1920s is even rarer
It's a lovely question, and the answer may surprise you. Record collectors like me who started when they were little - and there are a lot of us - have been playing records like these all our lives. The generation that bought them gave them to us, as they were cleaning out their homes, or were upgrading to stereo and got these out of their basements/attics while they were at it as well.
The ones shown here are fairly common, so they have been heard much more recently than you might think.
As a full-time musician myself, I often wonder whether my predecessors gave any thought about their work being heard and enjoyed 100-plus years later. Now that it's been digitized (check out the Library of Congress' Digital Jukebox) their sounds will live on until the end of the world.
Just like music made in the 1930's , there are still fans of that era, and im sure there are still people alive today that had parents or grand parents that played these when they were wee babes.
I used to upload music from my 78 rpm record collection to UA-cam. The only time I ever got a content ID match was for a later remastered version of the recording. By arguing my original non-remastered upload was out of copyright, I won the claim.
Try arguing with UA-cam nowadays…
Shazam is missing out on the fun, your record collection is stellar!
True!
Honestly would be a good idea to digitalize and distribute old no copyright records to Shazam/others so they can add them to the catalogue. They probably want more data for their systems.
@@rowaystarco I digitise old records, it's a fun hobby of mine.
The 1922 recording of My Buddy by the International Novelty Orchestra is one of my favorites.
OH so that’s why there are so many
‘Oldies playing in the next room’ streams around - all the music they’re using is public now
The store emplyee who wrote 99 on all the labels could do with a backhanded slap to the jawbone.
Another one of your "how the heck did he come up with this idea?"-videos that I love so much. :)
I suspect the main reason Shazam fails is that there are no modern reissues on digital format from which it can index them. It's no surprise that both Heifetz and Caruso were picked up instantly since they have been reissued digitally countless times. Pretty sure Shazam will fail on any analog-only recordings no matter when it was released, but I haven't extensively tested it.
Anyway, I enjoyed some fine old tunes! Keep up the splendid work, especially if it involves vintage music.
The variable play speed doesn't help either
Is it true that Shazam uses Apple Music to check for a match? That's what somebody told me a few years ago.
@@jamescollins6085 Its highly unlikely. Shazam doesn't use the literal song to create a match, instead using a songs "hash". Shazam can match over 15 Billion songs, while apple music has 90 million. Your friend probably said that as Shazam is owned by Apple and usually shows Apple Music as the default option to listen to the song you just Shazamed.
For instance if you Shazamed an Amazon exclusive song, Shazam would detect it, but it won't give you the option to listen to it on AM. Cheers
@@jamescollins6085 I have some music released, and I can choose where it goes, Spotify, Amazon, Deezer, etc. I have to separately select Shazam as well, so that would suggest they don't get their data automatically from another source. I can also leave out Apple Music and still check Shazam, so they wouldn't be able to use Apple as a source then.
@@DaedalusYoung That's interesting, thanks for the information.
Many of these pieces are so rare that even big streaming services like Spotify or Amazon don't have them, so it's not surprising Shazam doesn't have them indexed either.
Apple owns Shazam and uses its Apple Music library to detect the music. So it’s definitely not a small company. Definitely bigger than Spotify
It doesn't have to be old. The majority of music from around the world (1950-2020) isn't on those corporate sites if that wasn't mainstream in yankland. A huge amount of top 40 in my country from my teens and twenties is nowhere to be found. You'd think it doesn't exist if you had to depend on Stealify.
Columbia is still around (absorbed by Sony?), you'd think that they'd be hunting for any copyright strike they can find
@@brentboswell1294 these recordings are in the public domain by default, he even explains at the start of the video.
@@kandigloss6438 true, but the one that Shazam identified also belongs in this category 😅
15:11- "The Sterling Trio'" was essentially three of the four members of the "Peerless Quartet" {Henry Burr, Albert Campbell, John Meyer}.
As always, a very interesting, entertaining and informative video. I enjoyed this as always.
However, in regards to the Victrola/Victor recordings, RCA Victor/Records had a warehouse in Camden NJ until the mid 1960's. The warehouse was demolished around that time, but before demolition of the warehouse commenced, they gave many record collectors a chance to salvage what they could for their personal collections. The warehouse contained many metal masters, test discs, promotional discs and many other types of recordings. When the demolition began, there were still many more master recordings in the building and after the demolition, the remaining masters were bulldozed into the Delaware River, with a pier subsequently built over them. Most of the masters that were bulldozed were that of Sergei Rachmanioff, who was one of the 20th Century's leading composers. When RCA Victor wanted to create a set of his complete recordings in 1973, the label had to search out collectors for more of his recordings as their list of them was incomplete. However, many masters that RCA Victor/Records considered very important were saved, such as Caruso's, Toscanini's, Gershwin's and Jimmie Rodgers, but why they didn't save Rachmaninoff's masters is a mystery indeed as he too was very important.
I think that the best way for Shazam to recognize the recordings that weren't recognized is that whoever owns the rights to these masters to digitize them and make the available for purchase as downloads on a music downloading site, where you pay a small price for the song so a listener can have the song in their digital library.
Thanks again. Looking forward to more.
Double sided records were introduced in about 1906, and everyone followed, but Victor retained their "Red Seal" label for prestige titles by well known artists, and priced them accordingly. They kept them single sided to remind the public of their higher class status. Other color labels from Victor signified a different kind of music, and were often priced lower. Victor maintained the one sided status of their "Red Seal" records
well into the 1920s.
Several years ago, I bought an Empire floor-standing gramophone player from a vendor at a local antiques mall and the vendor, a kind elderly woman, gave me 73 78 rpm records for free the next day and many of those were fun, quaint fox-trots from the 1920's. :)
I'm sure by the 1940's that modern "electric" recording method really changed things
@@ChristopherSobieniak electric recording came in 1925
@@gunnarthefeisty Thanks.
There used to be an FM station here in the San Francisco Bay Area that played nothing but old records like these. Loved it!
i remember when windows media player had radio and one of the stations was old-timey country music i liked that.
@@bland9876 Yeah, that was really cool to 10 year old me back then.
Those photos @10:00 are cool. I didn't really know how they recorded these records back then. To see how it was done in it's most primitive form is very cool!
I’m about positive I’ve heard some of those - including the very last one -before.
Anyway, I really liked “A little bit of heaven”, the guy had an amazing voice. I’ve been trying to find it somewhere online, but don’t seem to be able to?
Anyway, this video was really cool. I’m glad you made it.
this is what makes me happy to be a vintage music hunter.
So many awesome and unique pieces are out there waiting to be listened to.
Shazam sometimes works for pre-WW2 records in case the (former) copyright owner invests into a modern or a re-issue album, containing the original sound, perhaps also de-hissed and de-clicked, and made it public. As an example, some records that were popular in the former Czechoslovakia in the 1930s under long-forgotten brands such as Ultraphon or Esta, can be detected as a Supraphon (which still exists to this day), album "Historie psaná šelakem" (The Shellac Time) - "edice Esta" (Esta release). For even older records though, which are in the public domain and were never publicly "remastered" on a modern reissue, it's another story as you can tell. And I be damned if you got a Content ID match whilst playing back a wax cylinder on an antique Edison phonograph :)
Hey, Ultraphon is not forgotten! I have a bunch of Ultraphon 78s. :)
I wonder how many got a content match!
None since these are all public domain and the whole point around content matches is that the copyright holders felt that that your video is definitely going to impede sales badly enough to issue a notice strongarming to cut out the section of the video or face getting a strike and worse having you're entire taken down because some greedy fuck wanted to squeeze as much money out of everyone they possibly could as humanly possible.
Just one, right now.
All of them.
@@michealpersicko9531 Small creators get copyright strikes *all* the time for "content" matches like complete silence and white noise!
@@TheCatLady65 I've had copyright notices for public domain recordings of classical music. If it's public domain, someone can just take it and claim copyright. Most people might not know about the copyright status, so they'll leave it, and others will just contest the claim, which is then usually released within minutes.
And yes, claiming copyright when they don't actually own the copyright is illegal, but who's going to spend that much time and money on something that didn't really affect them that much?
What a fascinating experiment. Thank you for sharing it!
It sometimes needs 3 or 5 times to recognize a song
Edit: my experience: using it since it first came out, it improved a lot. But I was annoyed it couldnt find a song I desperately wanted to know. After 4 years I found it by myself, using the title of the wrong song. If it wasnt for me, it would still shazam a completely different and nonsense song.
I have practically evey one you have played...started collecting these old "classics" back in 1963...they were had for give-away prices back then...now very hard to find in the "everyday" world. My late dad, being in the radio/tv service business brought home boxes of these records from families who no longer wanted them! Art Hickman had his start in San Francisco in 1918...my hometown. Back then, people would have Victrola Dance Parties at home...the dance music was a hot item. 1918...the start of the "Spanish Flu Pandemic"...and my parents birth year. The $1.50 price is the original selling value! So many of these vintage numbers are lost in time. Tenor John McCormack's "A Little Bit of heaven" was nearly a million dollar seller. All these label prices are the original over the counter value. Caruso's Red Seals commanded that price! He was the first Victor Recording artist under that company's contract.
UA-cam's auto music thingy says it found "Cavalleria Rusticana", and I'm curious, did that affect the monetization of this video, now that it should be in the public domain?
Doesn't that mean it is claimed?
The monetization is held until my dispute is approved.
@@vwestlife that's ridiculous, hope UA-cam doesn't decline your claim
@@vwestlife Please update us on the status I'm very interested to see how it turns out.
"Fox trot" is old record label code for "we never figured out the exact dance for this one, so it's going in the one-size-fits-all pile."
The Raymond Scott Quintet's "Powerhouse" is listed as a fox trot, too. Try it sometime. :)
interesting, nice track. listened 3 times in a row, i like it ;)
Even Rock around the clock was called a foxtrot on Decca Records.
Powerhouse was like the "Eruption" of that era
I thought Fox Trot meant,in dancing, you dance a box step.
am i the only one who gets a nostalgia like feeling from these 1920s music?
Definitley not, it's almost like a longing for retrieving a memory from a life you probably never lived. On the off chance you actually have past lives, who knows?
@@bingobunny7862 exactly!
Victrola records were the prestige label from the Victor Company, and yes, they were made long after double-sided discs were universally being sold. Being more highbrow and featuring opera and classical singers, they cost a lot more and only had one song per side. Alma Gluck did a lot of Victrola records. She was the mother of a well-known mid-20th century actor named Efrem Zimbalist Jr. who did a lot of TV work.
These songs are pretty great. It's interesting to see what level shazam is indexing music apparently not from the twenty's. I wonder if just using streaming services to index or if it has another database.
*Twenties
*twentteys’s
since it's owned by apple it's probably just apple's library of music
@@supercattelephone excellent point
@@Mrshoujo Begone, grammar nazi.
Agree, the audio quality from jthat 1915 record was astounding compared to the rest.
It's not surprising that it recognized Heifetz and Caruso, both of whom are still recognized as masters and have numerous CD releases of their music. Early Classical music is in demand, too. It would be interesting to pick up one of the Archeophone Audio Yearbook CDs, which takes the tops tracks from each year (roughly 1905-1922 so far), and see if Shazam recognizes one of those tracks. Frankly, I doubt any of the other discs you played have ever been commercially digitized, so why would Shazam know them? As a lover of old music and old books, though, I do chuckle at how badly the various services do at catering to my tastes and providing recommendations.
I love your videos! You have just gained a subscriber
I love music from that Era! The songs are better than the recording technology of the time.
Can you imagine trying to explain all this someone a hundred years ago?
A lot of futurists of the day imagined thinking boxes that we could speak to and which could remember and recall things for us… but I think _even they_ would be surprised by how light and commonplace these computation slabs we all have are!
@@kaitlyn__L I’m only 39 and I’m still amazed by the stuff we have now like a portable computer in my pocket with our phones that we take for granted. I can’t imagine what the world will be like if I make it to 90.
@@mikeg2491 yes! I’m 27 so I saw PDAs go from glorified calculators to, well, powerful smartphones that are replacing computers for many people. But I can only imagine how exciting the first portable calculator boom was. (Though of course that was before you were born too!) I sure hope I can see as much of where we’re going as possible.
A Little Bit of Heaven sounds like it might’ve been sung by a Scotsman, where indeed tapped and rolled Rs are still a thing! His singing delivery reminded me a bit of Ivor Cutler, albeit nowhere near as silly as Cutler. Of course I can’t be bothered to look up the artist printed on the record label even though it would’ve taken less time than writing this comment :)
Try Soundhound. Over 10 years ago I switched to that after discovering it was more accurate and responsive and haven't bothered going back to Shazam.
Besides some minor mispronunciations, good video. Also thanks a lot of new good listening material for me since this is the era I listen to for regular music. It doesn’t shock me that these modern music identifiers haven’t the slightest notion of the music from the ragtime and early jazz period. Also Fox-Trot basically was their go to term to represent Jazz or Dance music, you’ll also see a lot of One-Steps or Two-Steps around from then aswell. And yes $1.50 to $2 and sometimes even $3 were indeed the prices of those 12 inch 78s, and 75¢ was standard pricing for 10 inch 78s. Aeolian Vocalion was originally more expensive because at that time they weren’t very big and they needed to make a profit. I also would like to note here that there are many many 78s from this era that sound stunningly clear, the earliest clear recording I have is from 1906. Lastly Columbia introduced the double-sided disc in 1908, and Victor followed in 1910. The latest single-sided discs were Victor’s Victrola Red Seal foreign series (of which you featured a few here), to my knowledge they had single-sided discs all the way up to the introduction of the electrical process recording in 1925. Another interesting use of late single-sided recordings was done through Sears & Roebuck under the auspices of their record brand Silvertone, which opened in 1916 on contract to reissue some turn of the century (ie 1901, 02, 03, & 04) Columbia masters.
Shazam most likely uses a digital archive such as Spotify, Apple Music or UA-cam Music to categorize music, that is also confirmed to be accurately labeled. So usually something that exists on these platforms will be identified.
I keep on hearing on one of my Facebook radio hobby groups that short wave radio listeners listen to WBCQ on 7.490 MHz on the 41 meter band that they air music like this and also recordings from cylinder recordings. Be sure to check it out on that 5 core receiver you have laying around or that International Stereo system with the LW-MW-SW and FM bands.
It works on the internet too.
Marion's Attic. It has a transvestite host.
That's disgraceful.
@@noncounterproductive4596 A transvestite host? An interesting detail, but not quite valid in this context. We're here to discuss music, not people's personal preference in physical self-expression.
@@DansuB4nsu03 My goodness, you certainly are uptight, aren't you? I stated a fact about that show and you are telling me to shut up.
It's a bit surprising that My Buddy, Loveless Love [also known as Careless Love] and Japanese Sandman did not register: all of them had many further recordings for some decades after. Does Shazam identify music or specific performances?
shazam from my experience identifies specific performances, I never get covers identified. Google on the other hand tries to mainly identify songs but not always which version specifically
@@Tim70theYawner Unless the cover is more popular than the orginal.
Ave Maria did'nt surprise me, it's was very popular and a lot of bands have covered it.
That recording of Cavalleria Rusticana was re-released in the 80's on the Best of Caruso 8-Track, complete with clicks and spots. :)
And still sung by pretty much every Sopranist ever since.
I love this video just playing in the background, the sound of records and the static is just so nice
I keep coming back to this video just for those clips of those old records, them along with your voice makes a really relaxing video
That red record was quite warped that machine did well playing it perfectly
That's a pretty tough challenge. In a less obscure, but still challenging vein, I have been surprised by Shazam's success rate with 1950's classical recordings, even on lesser known European labels. It usually gets the orchestra, date and performers, so someone has done a lot of inventory work in making the algorithm what it is. Congratulations on your 78RPM reproduction results. Sounds pretty good!
*Something interesting about the app is that along the way in the last years I have collected few phones that needed to be upgraded with another one and in every time I have installed many apps including Shazam and SoundHound but I never care to update those apps because I felt they were working just fine and while doing that I used different apps versions from my old phones to identify some songs that I was interested to find, some versions found it while some others kept bouncing back with the same "not found" message but some versions definitely they will, including SoundHound*
So cool
Bold of you to assume companies won't still try to go after any entity without a dedicated legal department.
Billy Murray was killing it back then!
I have Shazam too, but no music that old to
test it out. My Mother was 12 in December
1922. She told me in the latter 1920's, she
was a Flapper, and in Europe was a fashion
model in the late 1920's and early 1930's,
going to Paris, Milan, and Berlin, back in
the Cabarat days, before she met my Father
in 1937 in Zurich, Switzerland 🇨🇭 where she
was from.
I remember the 78's when I was younger,
before the modern LP's came out in late
1950's.
Also, downtown Manhattan, NYC, had stores
with the old records for sale, when I was
working down there in the 1970's.
I’ve always loved flapper fashion! What excellent taste :D sounds like she had quite an adventure!
Interesting, thanks for sharing, Raymond.
Incidentally, modern (vinyl) LPs first appeared in the USA in 1948, 45s in 1945.
I’m surprised Billy Murray wasn’t recognized since not only are his records prominent on UA-cam (even I have a Murray upload) and have been reissued, but the US Library of Congress has also archived his music.
And he even has a crazed fan that uses two accounts to comment on his videos. Hopefully UA-cam deletes both channels.
I got a reply in the notifications, but either it's deleted or the comment i replied on is gone. There was no highlighted comment or reply, so the comment must have been deleted.
What makes them crazed?
I'm surprised too. I mean the guy was in Ghostbusters and Groundhog Day for heaven's sakes.😉
Really interesting video as always, thanks!
I use Shazam all the time to help DXing radio stations and I'm always shocked just how much noise and interference can be in the sound and Shazam will still get it. Sometimes Shazam will pick out a song I enjoy and know well faster than I can recognize it through the noise.
Also, I believe Shazam has a small 2-3 second buffer of audio that it holds before you press the Shazam button that it'll upload in addition to the audio after you press the button. This helps it feel a bit faster and more instant than it really is, but it's still really impressive regardless. I know this because if I switch stations and immediately hit the Shazam button, it'll pick up the song from the previous station unless I give it a few seconds, haha.
I uploaded a video to UA-cam with a weak FM station reception, where I couldn't pick up what song was playing, but UA-cam could :)
I think all of those songs are public domain now.
I know a lot of the music from this period and most of these are pretty obscure. "My Buddy" and "Japanese Sandman" were big hits, so maybe if the software could identify the tunes instead of a specific recording it should get those. Ernie Hare was one of the famous "Happiness Boys", teamed with Billy Jones. They were one of the first acts to make it big on radio. "I Makes Mine Myself" refers to home brewing or distilling in the days of prohibition, and he's doing an imitation of Bert Williams, a black recording & stage star who had died recently. Isham Jones is actually pronounce "Eye-sham", and they were one of the most popular dance bands of the period. Rudy Wiedhoff was the one who popularized the saxophone, so he was also a very big star of the time, now forgotten. Also, in those days, if it was 3/4 time it was a waltz. Everything 4/4 time was labelled fox trot. 2/4 time would be labelled "march". Before 1920 you might also have "schottisches" or "polkas".
With these musical selections in the public domain, nobody can claim copyrights on them at all. If they record a new performance of these songs, that recording can be copyrighted but not these original recordings.
but still the cavalleria rusticana record triggered a copyright claim
@@Jimmyhaflinger Did the title actually trigger a claim or was the song simply identified correctly?
@@miata1492 it's an actual copyright claim, as it includes licensing informations
UA-cam don't care about public domain it seems
That's amazing how good that music sounds being that old thanks for the awesome video!
HOORAY, most of the music I listen to is no longer under copyright!
Great video.👍🇺🇸
Nipper!!!
Does Shazam recognize the music or a digital code in the bitstream?.
What a gorgeous record collection!
the early American Zonophone records of 1904 to 1906 were of a completely different type of shellac the strange thing is that it degrades and forms pock marks almost like mold we see on wax cylinders also it's light-sensitive and light exposure will make the black shellac turn brown over time.
Then they all need digital preservation before they are lost forever
I have a single wax cylinder record and always wanted to know what it sounds like. Never was able to find it
@@Balrog-tf3bg well if you have the title of the tune I have 25000 digital sound files many of them wax cylinders so we could see if another copy of your cylinder exists.
my mail info is under each of my videos on my channels just type tino van der zwan and you'll find the 2 channels.
@@tinovanderzwanphonocave544 if I can find it again that’d be awesome
I'm actually rather surprised at how Shazam was able to pick up a few of them! And, yeah, some of the stuff they managed to pull off before microphones is just incredible!
Hiefitz and Caruso were great artists whose early recodings have mostly been re-issued on CDs and these were probably fed into Shazam's database. I doubt if anything that did not get onto CD will be matched. Apart from anything else the variations in surface noise when cataloging old 78 material would be hard work for the algoriths to work around!
Genuinely curious, would it recognize Heartaches by Al Bowlly? Both it and he got shot into the mainstream with EATEOT.
Back in the day, the hyperbole used to sell them claimed: "You cannot distinguish the recording playing from the actual live performance of the singers!"
Yeah, some of the music marketing back then was pretty silly.
I'm really glad to see you got this video reinstated by prevailing against Sony, even if UA-cam deleted all the comments. Edit: It says 16 comments total, but they all do seem to be there. Wow UA-cam sure is broken sometimes!
The comments have been restored.
I wonder if anyone thought when they bought those records that they would still be around 100+ years in the future. The fact that these records last if stored well for later generations to discover. I have the Victor 18995 "My Buddy" record but yours is really nice shape compared to mine.
That's what saving media and passing it onto others can do.
heifetz is arguably one of the most famous and possibly also the best violinist of the 20th century. i would have been astounded if the app did not identify him.
Double-sided records became the standard in 1908. Victor kept their high-priced and prestigious Red Seal discs single sided because... they could. Owning them was something of a status symbol. Victor switched them to double-sided in 1923.
So in 2067 everyone will just start remaking 20s music
It strikes me as very likely that if an acoustically-recorded performance was not considered by the rights-holder as worthy of re-pressing after the advent of electrical transcription (versus simply re-recording a cover performance in higher fidelity and at a standardized speed), that it would have been more easily forgotten or abandoned by said rights-holder as lower priority for integration into an intellectual property portfolio, especially as reproduction rights for the recordings were consolidated and re-consolidated by larger and larger recording houses / rights-holding entities over time, yielding the handful of monolithic IP portfolios we see today which are indexed by services like Shazam
im more interested in hearing these old recordings and thinking how everthing was so different then...i think of myself being back in those days...it is facsinating!!
The Google Pixel 6 and 6 Pro have a feature called "now playing" which can automatically identify music without needing an external app like Shazam. I tend to use it on my Pixel 6 a lot and it recognises basically everything I throw at it
I'm pretty sure that's just a shortcut to the "what is this song" on the Google now app
@hd01 it's not a widget, it's always running on the lockscreen so if you go on a night out it will recognize every song playing in the background on your night out, and you can refer to this 'tracklist' the next day. It's an offline system so uses no live data stream to cross-reference. I assume it updates regularly over wi-fi. You can press the power button on your phone at any time and it'll tell you what's playing now.
It's really quite a cool features
Ditto. When I'm at work, my Pixel 6 Pro always says what has been playing all throughout my 9 hour day at work.
This has been a standard Android/Google feature for almost a decade now in one form, or another, and at one point before Google removed it, you could even hold up your phone/tablet near your TV speakers, and it would identify what show was playing on your TV getting it right about 60% of the time from my testing on normal shows, but usually not things like UA-cam, etc.. which is understandable with how much content is put out everyday.
Every android can do it with voice search
Conclusion: There needs to be a digital data from it so they can scan the Spectrogram
honestly this is very Interasting, also you have a lot of equipment for stuff like this I find that neat!!