Eva Moreda Rodríguez on the
formative years of the recording
industry, focusing on the
culture surrounding the gabinetes fonográficos of fin-de-siècle Spain.
To the question “When were recordings invented?”, we
might be tempted to answer “1877” — the year when Thomas A. Edison was first
able to
record and playback
sound with a
phonograph. But what if we think of recordings not as
mere carriers of
sound, but as commodities that can be bought and sold, as artifacts
capable of capturing and embodying values and emotions; of defining a
generation, a country, or a
social class? The story then becomes one that unfolds over three decades and is full of many layers and ramifications. Without Edison’s
technological innovations, recordings would have
certainly never existed — but hammering out the
concept of recording, were also a
myriad of other inventors, musicians, producers, and entrepreneurs from all over the world. Most of them were
enthusiastic about being part of a
global revolution, but they worked in close
connection with their
milieu too, shaping recording technologies and their uses to
relate to the needs, dreams, and desires of the audiences they knew.
The
tenor Florencio Constantino was one of these now-forgotten pioneering individuals. Born in 1868 in Ortuella, a mining
village miles from the Bilbao
estuary in the Basque Country, Constantino was one of the first musicians in history to
develop a recording
career worth the name. In
fact, his life and
career interlock with the early history of recorded music in
fascinating ways. He was part of a
generation of Spaniards who discovered recorded
sound in their teenage and early
adult years, found himself in high
demand as a recording artist in
local studios in Spain at the end of the nineteenth
century, and went on to
record internationally as multinationals decimated Spain’s
indigenous industry.
Edison
initially believed that the
phonograph would be most demanded in offices and companies: recorded
sound, he thought, would make business
communication easier by doing away with the ambiguities of written
language. However, the Improved Phonograph and Perfected Phonograph, which he both launched in 1888, took recording technologies in a
different direction. Audiences turned out not to be
interested in the
phonograph because of its
practical uses, but because it entertained them: the first
phonograph parlor opened in San Francisco in 1889, and was soon followed by thousands of others all over the United States. In Constantino’s
native Spain — more
rural, less industrialized — phonographs were paraded around cities and towns instead and
temporarily installed in
civic centres, schools, hotels, and churches; for a
modest fee, locals from all
social classes were
able to
acquaint themselves with the latest discoveries of science. Some of the names and endeavors of these Spanish phonography pioneers have found their way to us today
through advertisements and reports in
local newspapers. Many of them were agents of Edison’s or funfair impresarios, and we know of a cornet player and
entertainer by the name of Lorenzo Colís who in the summer of 1894 toured a
phonograph around the Basque Country and La Rioja, and visited the Ortuella
area.
And yet, if we were to listen to some of the
surviving examples from this
era, we would
probably find it hard to believe that anyone could have
mistaken what is in them with live
sound, even
accounting for
deterioration in the
cylinder. While it is true that some such claims simply echoed Edison’s
publicity (or transcribed it to the letter), one can
imagine that an unfamiliar
audience, shocked by the
experience of hearing recorded
sound for the first time, would be willing to forgive shrillness, blurriness, and
lack of
definition, and
accept what they heard as an
accurate representation of
reality. Moreover, most audiences would not be
particularly interested in hearing a
particular recording again and again after they had
established that it was, indeed, true to
reality. In any case, most would not have been
able to do so unless a
phonograph was in
residence in their town: phonographs were
expensive and
difficult to
manipulate at the time, hardly
appropriate as a home
appliance. Although some recordings from that
era have survived to the present day, most were intended to be as
ephemeral as the
sound they recorded: played back in phonographic sessions but
seldom treasured in households or collections.
The
phonograph became a
domestic appliance with the
successive launches of the Spring Motor Phonograph, the Edison Home Phonograph, and the Edison Standard Phonograph between 1896 and 1898. With this came the
need for a
constant supply of professionally produced, well-crafted recordings that could
lure upper- and middle-class
phonograph owners back to the shops again and again. The recording as a
commodity was born — but it still had to be
embedded with values and meanings
potential buyers could
relate to; values and meanings that resonated with ideas they
might have had about themselves, but also connected them to the
powerful narrative of the
global revolution brought over by recording technologies. In Constantino’s
native Spain, the
task was undertaken by some forty gabinetes fonográficos (phonography studios) scattered across the country — a Spanish
phenomenon in some respects, relatively
independent of Edison’s
commercial enterprises in more industrially developed countries. The gabinetes sold phonographs
imported from the United States, but the
wax cylinders were recorded and produced by the gabinetes themselves.
The gabinetes not only produced the first recordings to be made in Spain; they also produced the first Spanish recordings, that is, recordings shaped by the
culture they were part of. This is
immediately obvious in the
choice of
repertoire. Theatrical
culture thrived in turn-of-the-
century Spanish cities: the upper and
established middle classes flocked to
opera houses; the working and lower middle classes, to zarzuela theatres and café cantantes where flamencowas performed — although the
latter two still managed to
attract a few members of the wealthier
social classes who longed for
authenticity. Soon,
opera, zarzuela, and flamenco were filling the gabinetes’ catalogues. Not all cylinders were
equal though: recording
opera for Hugens y Acosta, Constantino was one of the few singers
able to
command 30 pesetas per
aria in 1899, shortly after returning to Spain from Latin America to
debut at the Teatro Real. A well-
established zarzuela
soprano would normally
command between 10 and 15 pesetas, while flamenco recordings could be bought for as little as 3 pesetas.
A
glimpse at Madrid’s
urban geography also suggests that the
nascent recording
industry and
theatrical culture interlocked in more
profound ways. Several gabinetes opened in the surroundings of
opera and zarzuela theatres. One of them, Viuda de Aramburo, was a
mere few yards from the Teatro de la Comedia; it originally sold
scientific and
technical equipment and started
marketing its own
wax cylinders in 1898. We know from El cardo, a phonography
magazine published in Madrid between 1899 and 1900, that Viuda de Aramburo employed a rather
astute apprentice, and so it is not out of the
realm of
possibility that the young man, having observed theatre-goers walk past his shop, figured out that they
might welcome the
opportunity to buy recordings of their
favorite zarzuela arias as a
sonic memento of what, by all accounts, was a
lively and highly entertaining
experience encompassing music, acting, and dancing. Álvaro Ureña — a
soldier who left the army to
dedicate himself to science and
technology —
might have followed a
similar reasoning when he opened his
luxurious gabinete fonográfico in 1897 in the
prestigious Barquillo street in the centre of Madrid, not far away from the Teatro de la Alhambra.
Ureña’s and other gabinetes were
luxurious indeed; their recordings, only
affordable to the upper and middle classes. Gabinete owners, however, made sure to
emphasize, sometimes in the same breath, that they were as
committed to disseminating the latest discoveries of science and
technology as they were to providing a
sumptuous experience to their customers. Of Ureña’s gabinete, the newspaper La correspondencia militar wrote that: “There cannot be more
luxury, art and
wealth in this
establishment. Large rooms, and
elegant electric lamps hanging from the ceiling; the golden and bronze-coloured
filigree interlocks artistically and contrasts with the
power of the very
modern voltaic arcs; phonographs of all sorts are laid out very tastefully around the place.” In turn-of-the-
century Spain, buying a
wax cylinder meant identifying as a member of an
emerging middle class who was no longer
interested in indulging in
luxury for
luxury’s sake, but was
committed to the country’s
economic and
social advancement through the
dissemination of science and
technology. Many owners of gabinetes were themselves part of this
emerging middle class, such as electrician Julián Solá in Madrid, and opticians José Corrons in Barcelona, Obdulio Bravo-Villasante in Madrid, and Pablo Lacaze in Zaragoza.
In the
era of the gabinetes, though,
wax cylinders still differed from
modern recordings in one
crucial aspect: they could not be duplicated in a
reliable and
effective way. Most
surviving recordings from that time are one-offs. If a gabinete was faced with an
unprecedented demand for, say, recordings of “La donna è
mobile” by Constantino, the only way to
satisfy customers would be to hire Constantino to
record several takes of the
aria, all
different from each other. It was unrealistic for the Spanish
industry to
rely on a few
outstanding or well-known performers to meet the
demand, and so, alongside with Constantino, a
multiplicity of lesser known, jobbing singers ventured into the recording
industry with a
modicum of
success. Some singers of the
era, in
fact, are only known to us in
connection with the recording
industry. Their names are Amparo Cardenal, Luisa Alarcón, Francisco Cervera: there is no
evidence that they ever graced a
professional stage, and they
might have even been talented amateurs who found an
opportunity of making money out of their singing thanks to the gabinetes. The gabinetes, on the other hand, turned
technological limitation into a
virtue and some of their owners routinely proclaimed that they were artisans rather than
mass producers, carefully crafting each
cylinder and making Spanish recordings
superior to those coming from any other country in the wo The gabinetes’
enthusiasm and
commitment, though, did not help them
survive when the gramophone, which recorded on reproducible discs, took hold in Spain after Compagnie Française du Gramophone opened a Spanish
branch in 1903. They resisted for a
couple of years, but by 1905 many had closed down and the rest were operating as subsidiaries of the Compagnie or other multinationals such as Pathé and Odéon. Constantino, who had by then embarked on an
international career in Eastern Europe and America, recorded zarzuela
arias for the Barcelona
branch of Pathé in 1903, followed by G&T in Berlin,
Edison Records in Italy, Pathé and Odéon in Paris, and
Victor and
Columbia in the United States. Many of his colleagues who had thrived during the
era of the gabinetes found themselves unable to
compete against better or more
established singers and went back to the stage.
Constantino died in
poverty in Mexico City in 1919 after a
series of
artistic fiascos. Seven years later, the
invention of electrical recording revolutionized the
industry again; one of the many
technological advances in the capturing of
sound that would
occur throughout the twentieth
century and on into the present. Despite these changes, the recording itself has – with its
ability to travel the world,
shape culture, and
connect the listener to a of performers and other listeners – still kept to this day most of the defining traits it had acquired thanks to Constantino and his contemporaries.