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

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

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 (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).

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationDigital Approaches to Inclusion and Participation in Cultural Heritage
Subtitle of host publicationInsights from Research and Practice in Europe
PublisherTaylor and Francis
Pages160-180
Number of pages21
ISBN (Electronic)9781000840933
ISBN (Print)9781032234380
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 24 Feb 2023
Externally publishedYes

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