NRR Project: Sounds of the ivory-billed woodpecker
Recorded 1935
The sounds of this historic recording issue from the wilds of the Singer Tract in rural Louisiana. There, in 1935, scientists recorded the calls of the ivory-billed woodpecker for the first and possibly the last time, as the bird is now widely considered to be extinct. Go to Cary O’Dell’s excellent essay at the National Recording Registry to find out more about the bird itself and the expedition that captured it.
It is a melancholy recording, when considered in context. The ratio of humans to wild animals has increased exponentially over the past 200 years, as industrialization and population growth have wiped out animal habitats. The list of extinct species is long, and getting longer by the day. Sometimes it seems as though mankind will exterminate the natural world around it before destroying itself.
At any rate, it is humbling to listen to a sound that will never be heard again. It is haunting to hear the bird cry out, perhaps to no response.
The National Recording Registry Project tracks one writer’s expedition through all the recordings in the National Recording Registry in chronological order. Flagstad and Melchior sing Tristan and Isolde.