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Here is an old recording that was found in storage after Dad died in 2011. Is it a recording that his parents, ie. my grandparents did, possibly in a few days, but there is one date, which is February 3, 1963.
My grandfather was Jón Björnsson (b.1903 – d.1985) from Karlsskála in Reyðarfjörður, east Iceland, but he lived most of his life in Reykjavík.
My grandmother Guðrún Bergþóra Bergsdóttir (b.1904 – d.1972) lived all her life in Reykjavík.
The reason for the recording was that Dad was studying electrical engineering in Germany. He was among the first engineering students who left Iceland to study in Europe after World War II.
Although there was a telephone between Iceland and mainland Europe, it was not possible for the public to make daily calls. But in those days it was customary to correspond and send letters. Around and after 1960, people began to acquire tape recorders and then the idea arose among Icelandic students to not only send letters, but also to use this new medium where people could hear the voices of their loved ones.
Unfortunately, not much of these recordings have survived, because tapes were expensive at these times. It was therefore customary to send the same tape back and forth with new recorded material each time. Something I unfortunately also did 10-20 years later with the cassettes.
Here in this recording, my grandfather and grandmother talk about the social life in Reykjavík, talk about the high frequency of accidents, possibly marine accidents that were almost a monthly occurrence, not least in the winter of those years. Then they talk about friends who are moving into a new flat, others having children and then others buying a new car. Grandfather talks about having a dream of me (Magnus) from when I was young, until I was old. Then he calls me, and asks me If I recognize his voice.
Then he mentions a beautifully carved cigar box that I inherited from my grandmother’s brother, Magnús Bergsson, who was a baker, but later went into the fishing industry with his son-in-law.
Most of the material on the recording is, however, mainly a recording from the Icelandic national broadcast service (RUV), which was at that time the only Icelandic radio station. The program was sent out on Long Wave so it could reach the whole country, but only during the day time.
Both grandparents enjoy listening to music and or dancing at all times and have fun. Therefore, you can hear both Icelandic piano music and Icelandic opera. At the end of the recording there is an educational episode about „automation“ in production and machinery, which my grandparents have been thinking my father would like to hear in Germany.
This recording below was in incredibly bad condition and of very poor recording quality. The volume was extremely fluctuating, probably because it wasn’t recorded on the same day. You could barely hear what was said in the recording due to the 50Hz hum and accompanying harmonics frequencies. Grandpa actually mentions in the recording that both the radio and the tape recorder are broken. The recorder even broke apart the tape so he had to fix it.
I was never able to clean this recording acceptably when I had the Izotope RX5 or RX8. It wasn’t until I got the RX10 that it went much better. However, I didn’t spend a lot of time cleaning everything or fixing it, simply because it would have changed the character of the bad sound quality that people were struggling with at these times. At least now you could hear what was being said.
The reason I released this recording on the web now, is that earlier this month it was 120 years since my grandmother was born.
I think it is worth mentioning that, some years ago I published another tape recording from the sixties, which was most likely a multimedia message from my parents in Germany to my grandparents in Iceland. It was from the Christmas 1964

(mp3 256kbps / 64Mb)

Recorder: unknown open reel deck.
Transferred from Revox B77 MkII to Sound devices 744 (24/48)
Mic. Unkown
Pix: Jón Björsson and Bergþóra Bergsóttir at home, close to the year 1964

Recording location: Blönduhlíð 3. Reykjavik

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Bjarni Jónsson ( 21. október 1881 – 19. nóvember 1965) fæddist í Mýrarholti sem var býli við Bakkastíg í Vesturbæ Reykjavíkur og voru foreldrar hans hjónin Jón Oddsson tómthúsmaður og Ólöf Hafliðadóttir. Eiginkona Bjarna var Áslaug Ágústsdóttir og eignuðust þau þrjú börn, Ágúst, Ólöfu og Önnu.
Bjarni lauk stúdentsprófi frá Lærða skólanum árið 1902 og lauk embættisprófi í guðfræði árið 1907 frá Kaupmannahafnarháskóla. Samhliða námi kenndi Bjarni við Stýrimannaskólann í Reykjavík og Kvennaskólann í Reykjavík. Haustið 1907 varð hann skólastjóri Barnaskólans á Ísafirði. Hann varð prestur við Dómkirkjuna í Reykjavík árið 1910, var prófastur í Kjarlarnesprófastsdæmi 1932-1938 og dómprófastur í Reykjavíkurprófastsdæmi frá 1945-1951. Hann varð vígslubiskup í Skálholtsbiskupsdæmi forna frá 1937 og til æviloka. Starfsferill Bjarna var langur og hann var starfandi prestur og vígslubiskup í rúmlega hálfa öld. Hann varð heiðursdoktor í guðfræði við Háskóla Íslands árið 1941 og hlaut ýmsar orður og heiðursmerki m.a. stórkross Hinnar íslensku fálkaorðu og hina dönsku Dannebrogsorðu. Bjarni var heiðursfélagi í fjölda félaga og árið 1961 varð hann heiðursborgari Reykjavíkurborgar en Bjarni þótti með þekktari borgurum Reykjavíkur og vakti athygli vegfarenda þegar hann gekk hempuklæddur milli Dómkirkjunnar og heimilis síns að Lækjargötu 12b.
Árið 1952 gafst íslenskum kjósendum í fyrsta sinn færi á því að kjósa sér forseta en fyrsti forseti Íslands, Sveinn Björnsson var þingkjörinn árið 1944 og endurkjörinn án atkvæðagreiðslu 1945 og 1949. Þrír frambjóðendur gáfu kost á sér Ásgeir Ásgeirsson, Bjarni Jónsson og Gísli Sveinsson forseti sameinaðs þings. Kosningarnar voru afar pólitískar og naut Bjarni stuðnings framsóknar- og sjálfstæðisfólks en vinstra fólk, einkum alþýðuflokksfólk studdi Ásgeir. Bjarni naut stuðnings Morgunblaðsins, málgagns Sjálfstæðisflokksins og á kjördag hvatti blaðið til þess í forsíðufrétt sinni að kjósendur myndu sameinast um Bjarna og sagði að „allir þjóðhollir Íslendingar kjósa séra Bjarna Jónsson.“ Niðurstaða kosninganna varð sú að Ásgeir Ásgeirsson var kjörinn forseti með 48,3% atkvæða en Bjarni hlaut 45,5,%. Þriðji frambjóðandinn Gísli Sveinsson hlaut 6,2% atkvæða (Wikipedia).
Það gæti talist vel við hæfi að sr. Bjarni sjái nú um predikun á netinu í Páskaviku og miðjum COVID-19 faraldri því hann var prestur í Dómkirkjuni á dögum spönsku veikinnar 1918.
Hér er á ferðini nokkuð dularfull upptaka með Bjarna því ekki er vitað hvaða ár hún var tekin upp eða af hvaða tilefni.
Upptökuna gerði Hörður Þormar, efnafæðingur frá Laufási í Eyjafirði, á segulbandstæki einhvern tíma á árunum 1955-1965.
Árið 2012 færði ég allt hans gamla spólusafn yfir á stafrænt form og gaf hann leyfi til að gera þessa upptökuna aðgengilega ef einhver gæti gefið nánari upplýsingar um hana. Það er nokkuð augljóst að tekið er upp úr LW útvarpi því heyra má öðru hverju smelli sem gætu allt eins stafað af sólvindum.
Það er ljóst að Ríkisútvarpið hefur átt og á kanski enn þessa upptöku. Það sem hins vegar er ekki ljóst, er hvenær þetta hefur verið tekið og útvapað sem varð til þess að Hörður hljóðritaði þessa predikun. Sjálfur man hann það ekki. Bjarni hætti prestskap 1951 en þá átti Hörður ekki spólutæki. Það kann hinsvegar að vera að Ríkisútvarpið hafi útvarpað þessari predikun þegar Bjarni var gerður að heiðursborgara Reykjavíkur 1961.
Ef einhver getur gefið nánari upplýsingar um þetta hljóðrit þá væri það vel þegið.
Upptakan er í tveimur hlutum því hún var á tveimur spólum.

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This is an old recording which was recorded on reel to reel recorder somewhere between the years 1955-1965 from a LW radio in Iceland. It is a church sermon with pastor Bjarni Jónsson (1881-1965). He was old style priest and well known cathedral bishop in Reykjavik from early to mid last century. This recording was found on a two reels in my parents friend´s storage. There was also other old personal recordings which I helped him to digitize in 2012.
What makes this recording interesting now when Covid-19 spreads all over the world is the fact Bjarni Jónsson was a pastor of the Reykjavik Cathedral when the Spanish flu crossed into Iceland in 1918 as well all over the Western world.
It is most likely this could be the only recording with this pastor from the last century which is almost forgotten now in modern days

(mp3 192kbps / 48.3Mb)
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Recorder: Sound devices 744 24bit/44khz
Reel player: Revox B77

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