Book chapter 551 views
Reframing ephemera: digitisation, community music-making, and archival value(s)
Charlotte Armstrong ,
Rachel Cowgill ,
Alan Dix ,
Christina Bashford,
Rupert Ridgewell ,
Maureen Reagan,
Michael Twidale ,
J. Stephen Downie
Digital Approaches to Inclusion and Participation in Cultural Heritage, Pages: 160 - 180
Swansea University Author: Alan Dix
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DOI (Published version): 10.4324/9781003277606-9
Abstract
Live musical performances play a powerful role in defining human communities across the globe, yet such intangible temporal/spatial experiences tend to leave only faint traces on the historical record. The Internet of Musical Events: Digital Scholarship, Community, and the Archiving of Performance (...
Published in: | Digital Approaches to Inclusion and Participation in Cultural Heritage |
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ISBN: | 9781003277606 |
Published: |
London
Routledge
2023
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Online Access: |
http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003277606-9 |
URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa62802 |
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2023-03-06T14:02:37.6312171 v2 62802 2023-03-06 Reframing ephemera: digitisation, community music-making, and archival value(s) e31e47c578b2a6a39949aa7f149f4cf9 0000-0002-5242-7693 Alan Dix Alan Dix true false 2023-03-06 SCS Live musical performances play a powerful role in defining human communities across the globe, yet such intangible temporal/spatial experiences tend to leave only faint traces on the historical record. The Internet of Musical Events: Digital Scholarship, Community, and the Archiving of Performance (InterMusE) project is working with local concert-giving institutions to digitise diverse source types relating to musical events and linking them together in the form of a dynamic digital archive, enabling them to “speak” to each other despite their apparently incompatible formats and geographical dispersal. Modelling new approaches to the open-access presentation of music-historical research based on digitally enabled collaboration, the project adopts an intensely collaborative and egalitarian approach to working alongside these musical communities to understand and preserve their heritage. This chapter explores community archives of musical ephemera as sites of co-produced, “post-custodial” collecting and preservation that can radically transform approaches to digitisation, community music-making, and archival value(s). Book chapter Digital Approaches to Inclusion and Participation in Cultural Heritage 160 180 Routledge London 9781003277606 4 1 2023 2023-01-04 10.4324/9781003277606-9 http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003277606-9 COLLEGE NANME Computer Science COLLEGE CODE SCS Swansea University 2023-03-06T14:02:37.6312171 2023-03-06T13:58:50.8425318 Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Mathematics and Computer Science - Computer Science Charlotte Armstrong 0000-0002-4557-4134 1 Rachel Cowgill 0000-0002-9835-4039 2 Alan Dix 0000-0002-5242-7693 3 Christina Bashford 4 Rupert Ridgewell 0000-0003-0608-4455 5 Maureen Reagan 6 Michael Twidale 0000-0002-1486-7364 7 J. Stephen Downie 0000-0001-9784-5090 8 |
title |
Reframing ephemera: digitisation, community music-making, and archival value(s) |
spellingShingle |
Reframing ephemera: digitisation, community music-making, and archival value(s) Alan Dix |
title_short |
Reframing ephemera: digitisation, community music-making, and archival value(s) |
title_full |
Reframing ephemera: digitisation, community music-making, and archival value(s) |
title_fullStr |
Reframing ephemera: digitisation, community music-making, and archival value(s) |
title_full_unstemmed |
Reframing ephemera: digitisation, community music-making, and archival value(s) |
title_sort |
Reframing ephemera: digitisation, community music-making, and archival value(s) |
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e31e47c578b2a6a39949aa7f149f4cf9 |
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e31e47c578b2a6a39949aa7f149f4cf9_***_Alan Dix |
author |
Alan Dix |
author2 |
Charlotte Armstrong Rachel Cowgill Alan Dix Christina Bashford Rupert Ridgewell Maureen Reagan Michael Twidale J. Stephen Downie |
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Book chapter |
container_title |
Digital Approaches to Inclusion and Participation in Cultural Heritage |
container_start_page |
160 |
publishDate |
2023 |
institution |
Swansea University |
isbn |
9781003277606 |
doi_str_mv |
10.4324/9781003277606-9 |
publisher |
Routledge |
college_str |
Faculty of Science and Engineering |
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facultyofscienceandengineering |
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Faculty of Science and Engineering |
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Faculty of Science and Engineering |
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School of Mathematics and Computer Science - Computer Science{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Science and Engineering{{{_:::_}}}School of Mathematics and Computer Science - Computer Science |
url |
http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003277606-9 |
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description |
Live musical performances play a powerful role in defining human communities across the globe, yet such intangible temporal/spatial experiences tend to leave only faint traces on the historical record. The Internet of Musical Events: Digital Scholarship, Community, and the Archiving of Performance (InterMusE) project is working with local concert-giving institutions to digitise diverse source types relating to musical events and linking them together in the form of a dynamic digital archive, enabling them to “speak” to each other despite their apparently incompatible formats and geographical dispersal. Modelling new approaches to the open-access presentation of music-historical research based on digitally enabled collaboration, the project adopts an intensely collaborative and egalitarian approach to working alongside these musical communities to understand and preserve their heritage. This chapter explores community archives of musical ephemera as sites of co-produced, “post-custodial” collecting and preservation that can radically transform approaches to digitisation, community music-making, and archival value(s). |
published_date |
2023-01-04T04:23:10Z |
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