logo
When Elvis and Ella were pressed onto X-rays

When Elvis and Ella were pressed onto X-rays

Hans India16 hours ago

When Western Electric invented electrical sound recording 100 years ago, it completely transformed the public's relationship to music. Before then, recording was done mechanically, scratching sound waves onto rolled paper or a cylinder. Such recordings suffered from low fidelity and captured only a small segment of the audible sound spectrum.
By using electrical microphones, amplifiers and electromechanical recorders, record companies could capture a far wider range of sound frequencies, with much higher fidelity. For the first time, recorded sound closely resembled what a live listener would hear. Over the ensuing years, sales of vinyl records and record players boomed. The technology also allowed some enterprising music fans to make recordings in surprising and innovative ways.
As a physician and scholar in the medical humanities, I am fascinated using X-ray film to make recordings – what was known as 'bone music,' or 'ribs.' This rather bizarre, homemade technology became a way to skirt censors in the Soviet Union – and even played an indirect role in its dissolution. Skirting the Soviet censorship regime At the end of World War II, Soviet censorship shifted into high gear to suppress a Western culture deemed threatening or decadent. Many books and poems could circulate only through 'samizdat,' a portmanteau of 'self' and 'publishing' that involved the use of copy machines to reproduce forbidden texts. Punishments inflicted on Soviet artists and citizens for producing or disseminating censored materials included loss of employment, imprisonment in gulags and even execution. The phonographic analog of samizdat was often referred to as 'roentgenizdat,' which was derived from the name of Wilhelm Roentgen, the German scientist who received the first Nobel Prize in physics in 1901 for his discovery of X-rays.
Moreover, X-ray films cannot be reused, hospitals often recycled them to recoup the silver they contained. Making music from medicine In the Soviet Union in the 1940s, some clever people realised that X-ray film was just soft enough to be etched by an electromechanical lathe, or sound recording device. To make a 'rib,' or 'bone record,' they would use a compass to trace out a circle on an exposed X-ray film that might bear the image of a patient's skull, spine or hands. They then used scissors to cut out the circle, before cutting a small hole in the middle so it would fit on a conventional record player. Then they would use a recording device to cut either live sound or, more commonly, a bootleg record onto the X-ray film.
But these record producers are not just engaged in illegal operations. They corrupt young people diligently and methodically with a squeaky cacophony and spread explicit obscenities.' Bone music was inherently subversive. For one thing, it was against the law. Moreover, the music itself suggested that a different sort of life is possible, beyond the strictures of Communist officials.
(The writer is associated with the Indiana University)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ryan Reynolds opens up about the effect of Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni case; calls the perspectives 'meaningless'
Ryan Reynolds opens up about the effect of Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni case; calls the perspectives 'meaningless'

Time of India

time3 hours ago

  • Time of India

Ryan Reynolds opens up about the effect of Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni case; calls the perspectives 'meaningless'

As the storm of the Blake Lively vs Justin Baldoni case catches up with Hollywood and wrecks the peace, Ryan Reynolds has been a strong support to his wife. While he has maintained the calm, Reynolds has also been involved in the mess. Ryan Reynolds opens up about... Opening up about the repercussions, Ryan remarked on how he has been dealing with the gossip and how he perceives the public scrutiny. The 48-year-old shared an insight about whether his business has been affected by the change in the perspectives of the people. In an interview with Time100, Ryan said, 'I can read something that says, 'He should be drawn and quartered. I could read something that says I should win a Nobel Prize. Both are meaningless.' Regarding the ongoing challenge and his plans to navigate it, the Canadian actor said, 'None of us are comprised of our best moments. None of us are defined by our worst moments. We are something in the middle.' However, his approach towards career and personal life will depend on the accessibility and accountability of the parts. 'The people that I work with know me, so there's never a question of anything like that. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like She Spent 35 Years Crafting Jewelry—Now It's Almost Gone Artisan Weekly Read More Undo If you operate with some degree of core values and integrity, they're going to help you up. If you're an a–hole, they're not. And that's pretty simple,' the 'Deadpool' actor said about the confidence he has in the people around him. About Ryan Reynolds and backlash The public scrutiny started around Ryan Reynolds, when the 'Gossip Girl' alum claimed that her husband was kind enough to share his insights and change the script of Colleen Hoover's adaptation, 'It Ends with US.' While some fans appreciated his helping hand, others raised their eyebrows about his uncalled inputs. The criticism increased after his name started appearing in the Lively vs Baldoni case.

Rabindranath Tagore's Letters Were Auctioned For Rs 6 Crore. Who Were They Written To?
Rabindranath Tagore's Letters Were Auctioned For Rs 6 Crore. Who Were They Written To?

News18

time5 hours ago

  • News18

Rabindranath Tagore's Letters Were Auctioned For Rs 6 Crore. Who Were They Written To?

Last Updated: The auction featured 35 handwritten letters and 14 envelopes, many published earlier, fetching Rs 5.9 crore—making it the second most expensive letter auction in India Letters written by Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore were recently auctioned for nearly Rs 6 crore during Astaguru's 'Collectors Choice' event held on June 26 and 27. A small statue sculpted by Tagore also fetched over Rs 1 crore at the same auction, drawing significant attention from collectors and art enthusiasts. According to Business Standard, the auction featured letters Tagore wrote to his close associate Dhurjati Prasad Mukherjee, a sociologist, musicologist, and confidant, between 1927 and 1936. Twelve of these letters originated from significant locations like Visva-Bharati, his residence in Uttarayan, Glen Eden in Darjeeling, and his houseboat Padma. Manuscripts were also included in the auction. Manoj Mansukhani, Chief Marketing Officer of Astaguru, remarked that the collection is not merely literary but a self-portrait of the Nobel Prize winner conveyed through his own words. The correspondence offers insight into Tagore's philosophical musings, artistic discussions, and deep personal feelings. Mansukhani noted that such comprehensive and intellectually rich collections of Tagore's letters are exceedingly rare and mostly preserved in institutional archives, making this public offering exceptional. The letters in this collection have been published previously in notable magazines and books. The auction presented 35 handwritten letters and 14 envelopes, fetching about Rs 5.9 crore, marking the second most expensive auction for letters. Additionally, the auction included 'The Heart', the only known sculpture made by Tagore, believed to be dedicated to Kadambari Devi, the wife of Tagore's brother Jyotirindranath. Crafted from quartzite in 1883 during his stay in Karwar, Karnataka, it sold for around Rs 1.04 crore. Tagore was only 22 years old at the time. Overall, these items were part of a larger collection of 77 pieces. Tagore's letters garnered the highest bids, followed by a painting from MF Hussain's Mother Teresa series, which sold for approximately Rs 3.80 crore. First Published: June 30, 2025, 17:59 IST

Tarun Balani turns inherited memories into an evocative album
Tarun Balani turns inherited memories into an evocative album

Mint

time6 hours ago

  • Mint

Tarun Balani turns inherited memories into an evocative album

How do you mourn a person you've never met? How do you process the bone-deep longing for an ancestral homeland you've never visited? New Delhi jazz drummer and composer Tarun Balani confronts these questions head-on in his new album Kadahin Milandaasin, an evocative and elegiac exploration of identity, displacement and the collective grief of a community in permanent exile. The album is inspired by the musician's inherited memories of his grandfather Khialdas Suratram Balani, a writer, painter and photographer who migrated from his home in Naushahro Feroze in Sindh to the refugee colony in Lajpat Nagar in 1952, in the wake of India's Partition. Balani never met his grandfather, who passed away aged just 40 in 1970. Growing up, he didn't hear a lot of stories about him either—the grief was too raw. Instead, Balani came to know his ancestor through the latter's paintings and photographs in the family home, and an old Yashika 635 box camera that he'd sneak out of his father's cupboard and play with as a young child. Those hours spent gazing into his grandfather's modernist paintings, or play-acting as a film-maker with his camera, would end up being a major influence on Balani's artistic worldview, and his self-conception as a 'sonic story-teller". 'I feel like this album has been brewing for years, because my first solo album [2012's Sacred World] also featured my grandfather's photography," says Balani, speaking over Zoom from his home in Lajpat Nagar, one of his grandfather's paintings occupying pride of place on the wall behind him. 'But back then I wasn't really thinking of my Sindhi heritage. With this record, the story of my grandfather's migration from Sindh to Delhi became a lens through which I could explore my Sindhi identity." These questions of identity were first sparked by a conversation Balani had with his German record label, as he was struggling to find a booking agency for Europe. Balani has always been hard to pin down musically. He's a jazz-inspired musician from New Delhi, performing with a multicultural ensemble based in New York—trumpeter Adam O'Farrill has Puerto Rican roots, guitarist Olli Hirvonen hails from Finland, while pianist Sharik Hasan is originally from Bengaluru. His musical output ranges from contemporary jazz to improvisational synth-led electronica. 'Everybody would tell us that they love my music, but that they can't place me," he remembers. 'It was almost like they were having an identity crisis, and weren't able to understand me. But I'm actually very comfortable in my skin. So I just felt like it was time for me to make a bold statement about my identity, and my ancestral lineage." Last February, Balani shared this idea for a new album with his father, who in turn gave him two black-and-white photographs—one of his grandfather and another of his grandparents. Those two images now appear on the front and back cover of Kadahin Milandaasin. Balani dove into his grandfather's archive, sifting through photographs, paintings, letters and manuscripts for inspiration. He also spoke to family members about how they—and other Sindhi families—experienced and dealt with the trauma of Partition, addressed most poignantly on album opener Lajpat Nagar Sometimes. 'In this day and age, I feel like it's necessary for us to reimagine or reinterpret this conversation of Partition so that it moves away from just being about loss and grief," he says. 'We need to understand how we can take this heritage forward." In order to do that, he spoke to linguists and Sindhi historians, and explored the works of other Sindhi artists and writers such as Shah Abdul Latif Bhittai, Gobind Malhi, Popati Hiranandani and Shaikh Ayaz. Tiri Pawanda, a poem by Shaikh Ayaz that reflects on Partition, would actually inspire the album's title, and title track. The poem includes the line 'Tade milanda si ('we will meet then"), which Balani flips into Kadahin Milandaasin ('when will we meet?"). 'The question is when will I meet my grandfather, but also when will I see the land they've left behind," says Balani. 'This became, at both a macro and micro level, a really beautiful question to chase, it kind of became the heart of the album." Over the title track's pensive piano melody and Sindhi-folk inspired rhythms, Balani repeats the question like an incantation, the first time he's ever sung on record. He meant for the track to be a surprise for his father, who had always wanted to be a classical singer, but had to work to support the family instead. 'I never got the chance to share it with him because my dad sadly passed away on 2nd November last year," he says. 'But when I was in the ICU with him during his last days, I actually sang these lyrics to him. And that's when I felt like I had really experienced pain and loss. This personal loss became a gateway to my lineage and ancestry." Though grief informs much of the Kadahin Milandaasin, it's far from funereal. Alongside the melancholy that suffuses songs like Sailaab (inspired by the devastating 2020 floods in Sindh) and Samadhi 2.11.24(the date of his father's passing), there's also pride in what he calls 'the quiet resilience" of being Sindhi. 'I found a lot of comfort in how we have still held on to our language, our traditions, the very basic yet beautiful daily rituals," he says. 'I think those are the beautiful things about being Sindhi that we've really held on to. Kadahin Milandaasinis a celebration of that." With the album finally out in the world, Balanui is now thinking of putting together an audio-visual exhibit featuring his grandfather's archival work as well as stories of the Sindhi diaspora. He's also working on the next edition of Listening Room, an immersive sound installation that focuses on Balani's—and others'—experience of climate change. He's also preparing to take the album on tour. But for now, he just hopes that the album inspires listeners to embrace their identities, without fear or reservation. 'What I hope listeners take away from this record is that you don't have to be afraid to be yourself," he says. 'And if you're not seeing yourself represented in stories or art, then you just have to find a way to do it yourselves. If you feel like you're different, don't be afraid to follow that path."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store