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Seriously...

Keepsake for My Lover

Seriously...

BBC

Documentary, Society & Culture

4.1885 Ratings

🗓️ 1 November 2016

⏱️ 31 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

'Like talking on the phone but a thousand times more thrilling,' voice recording booths invite you to 'hear yourself as others hear you' by entering a weird machine to cut a record. Once a technological novelty, these recordings leave a unique legacy and a wonderful world of audio peculiarities, which serve as a vital reminder for how we communicate today.

Once a staple of seaside resorts and arcades, famously used in the films Brighton Rock and Badlands, they returned to prominence when Jack White restored a booth, on which Neil Young recorded his 2014 album. While the discs speak for themselves, the booths ask questions about us and how we choose to present ourselves to the world.

Janine H. Jones crosses the Atlantic, to meet the people who have restored these booths, to find out what's the value of putting our money where our mouth is and speaking out loud. Recording personally and for posterity, why are people in their droves returning to make a permanent record, instead of the infinitely editable yet intangible digital recordings offered by the technology in our pocket?

Presenter: Janine H. Jones Producer: Hannah Loy

Contributors: Bill Bollman (Record booth restorer) Alisha Edmonson (Songbyrd Cafe) Will Prentice (British Library) Digby Fairweather (jazz musician) Ben Blackwell (Third Man Records) With special thanks to The British Library & The Imperial War Museum for access to their collection of discs. With special thanks to Jason Spellman, Ben Soundhog and Mike Hale for donating their discs to the project. With special thanks to Cai Strachan for digitising the donated discs and donating the first disc that sparked the whole idea.

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is the BBC.

0:09.0

Hello daddy. Hello daddy.

0:10.0

I have my haircut.

0:12.0

How are you? How are you? The echoes of past conversations.

0:17.0

Well darling, I wish you very happy birthday,

0:20.0

happy Christmas and happy New Year.

0:22.0

Carved into a six inch vinyl.

0:24.0

And everything with her I'm saying to you is coming out onto a record

0:28.0

and you must ask Daddy to put it on your gram phone.

0:31.0

Then you'll hear me.

0:32.0

But I can't... For more than a hundred years we've

0:35.0

been recording the human voice and now it's pretty easy we leave voicemails we

0:40.1

send voice notes and we listen to podcasts.

0:42.8

The song we sang to

0:45.3

play a deal.

0:48.0

But during the last century, voice recording booths were dotted around the world

0:51.9

at major tourist sites.

0:53.7

Harrods, the luxury department store in London,

0:56.7

the top of the Empire State Building in New York.

0:59.6

They were there for passers-by to wander in,

1:02.1

record their message, and take it away.

1:05.0

No editing, no retakes, just their real unpolished voice. I'm Rhyanna Dylan and today's seriously interesting story is all about the

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