A recording of the first trans-Atlantic broadcast - an orchestral performance transmitted from London and relayed to the U.S. East Coast in 1925 - also was included because it represented a technological breakthrough in broadcasting. The Library of Congress chooses 25 recordings each year to add to its registry and preserve. Nominations come from a Library of Congress preservation board and online suggestions from the public. The selections for 2007 bring the registry's total to 250.
Jackson's 'Thriller' among cultural treasures
WASHINGTON (AP) - May 14, 2008 Twenty-five selections were added to the National Recording
Registry on Wednesday, part of the library's attempt to save
America's aural history by archiving recordings deemed
"culturally, historically or aesthetically significant."
The inductees range from Michael Jackson's 1982
all-time-bestseller "Thriller" and jazz artist Herbie Hancock's
1973 fusion smash "Headhunters" to the 1977 record of Earth
sounds that flew aboard the spacecraft Voyager in the event alien
life forms encountered the craft. Other recordings added to the
registry include works by Roy Orbison, Charlie Parker, Duke
Ellington, Kitty Wells and Smokey Robinson and the Miracles.
A collection of Navajo songs, Harry Truman's 1948 Democratic
National Convention speech, radio broadcasts from Ronald Reagan
before he became president, and the original cast recording of "My
Fair Lady" also made the cut, as did broadcasts of New York Mayor
Fiorello LaGuardia reading comics to children during a 1945
newspaper delivery strike.