Affiliate Programs and Work at Home Guide
Search:

Home | Entertainment | Arts


Audio books herald the return of the oral tradition

By: Mike Devoran

Audio books were first used as long ago as 1932, when the American Federation for the Blind produced a gramophone record which ran at 33

1/3 revolutions per minute. A 12-inch LP (long playing) record had a running time of about 22 minutes a side, so a book of 60,000 words could be recorded on 8 or 9 double-sided twelve-inch disks.

Shakespeare and Kipling were among the first authors whose works were released as talking books, along with the American Declaration of Independence.

The development of the vinyl microgroove LP in the 1940's allowed even slower recording speeds, and first 16 2/3 RPM and then 8 1/3 RPM disks became the standard.
More recently, other formats started to be used for audio books, starting with the compact cassette. Cassettes had some major advantages over vinyl, such as better portability because of the small size of the players and media. Other features were recording times of up to two hours and the fact that the tape stayed where it was left. The Sony Walkman extended even further.

CDs have been popular as a medium for audio books, and with the popularity of the iPod and other audio players, the MP3 format has become more widely used.

These days, you can download audio books directly from the web. MP3 compression technology makes audio book files relatively small and quick to download. Once you have the MP3 files on your computer, you can burn them to a CD or copy them to an MP3 player. You could even record them onto audio cassette!

There is a wide range of audio books available - best-selling fiction, business books, historical novels, self-help, health and recreation. Many fictional audiobooks are narrated by professional actors who use their abilities to bring the characters to life.

The great thing about audio books is that you can listen to them just about anywhere - in the car, while jogging or working out, in bed, out shopping. Modern MP3 players are tiny and light, and even the tiniest model will usually have at least enough space for a full audio book.

Article Source: http://www.SponsorDirectory.com/Free-Content

Mike Devoran invites you to discover a vast selection of audio books at PortableListener.com

---JJ---

Please Rate this Article

 

Not yet Rated

Click the XML Icon Above to Receive Arts Articles Via RSS!


Super Banner Traffic

Powered by Article Dashboard