Brief History
Thomas Alva Edison believed that an electronic device could be built to  communicate with people
who had crossed over. He believed that if spirits could be captured on film, why not electronically.
Edison announced in the October 1920 issue of Scientific American that he was working on such a
device, but it was never completed. Edison  died in 1931 leaving behind no machine or blueprints.
In the 1950’s, while recording a Gregorian chant on a magneto phone, Father Emetti (Catholic
priest, scientist, physicist and philosopher), captured a voice responding to a question that he
asked of his dead father. He was able to repeat this phenomena. The voice recorded  even used
a nickname only his father called him.  Father Emetti was disturbed by this, he would then seeked
counsel of Pope Pius XII in Rome. The Pope assured him he had no reason to worry if the
phenomena was in fact real.
In 1965 Konstantin Raudive a professor of psychology. Began documenting words recorded on
audiotapes. Between 1965 and 1974; he, with the help from a physicist and an electronics expert,
made over 100,000 audiotapes under strict conditions. He published their findings in a book called
“Breakthrough.”
From the 1970s until present day, Marcello Bacci of Italy has been conducting Instrumental
Trans-communication Voice (ITC) research in his laboratory. His ITC experiments, he uses Direct
Radio Voice Method (DRV). This method obtains abnormal communications directly through the
speakers of radios. These voices seem to acknowledge listeners by name, also respond to
questions, and at times providing important information.