| David & Kurt and others.....As an NRPB Board alternate 
member and from our discussions, one of the six  "criteria" for 
nominations is that unpublished (hence private recordings, broadcast recordings, 
etc.) can be nominated as well as published (commercial) recordings be they 
music, non-music, spoken word, or broadcast sound.  But it is unclear to be 
me Kurt what you mean by "privately held".  Do you 
mean a commercially made recording (released or unreleased) which 
would mean published but in private hands?   Or privately recorded 
hence "unpublished"?  Remember one of the other criteria:  "Recordings 
selected for the National Recording Registry are those that are culturally, 
historically, or aesthetically important, and/or inform or reflect life in the 
United States."  Very broad, but I would speculate that "technically 
significant for the history of recorded sound" would also 
be understood as being in the above criteria.  If a recording that "exists" is placed on the registry I would 
imagine the process would follow as it does for the National Film Registry, 
which is when significant films that still exist were selected for the 
registry.  The item could already have been preserved, or LC would seek to 
locate the original or best surviving copy and if possible obtain a copy 
which could lead to preservation work.  It does not affect the owner's 
rights in any way.  However the item must be known 
to "exist" on a recording which could then possibly lead to locating the 
original or copy closest to the original, thus enhancing the 
possibility that the item(s) will be properly preserved in the best 
sound.   An example of a group of recordings (unpublished) I will 
nominate is FDR's "Fireside Chats" broadcasts.  Now they exist in various 
places, but probably the best copies would be the 
instantaneous transcription discs held either by the FDR Library or 
National Archives.  Or another group would be the "Mapleson 
Cylinders" (already preserved) and so on. An example of an unpublished single broadcast 
recording would  be President Woodrow Wilson Armistice Day speech from 
November 10, 1923.  Not only was it his last speech, this one is 
electrical and of an actual broadcast ? the earliest still in 
existence.  I am not an expert in commercial recordings, but I would 
assume such obvious items such as Elvis Presley's first released 
recording; or those of Robert Johnson's blues recordings, and on and 
on......the possiblities of recordings that were "first", or helped define 
a musical genre, or were technically significant, all could be 
possibilities. Anyone anywhere gets to send in ten nominations if the 
recording falls within the six criteria. Les Waffen Special Media Archives National Archives   >>> davlew@xxxxxxxxxxxx 09/19/02 11:40AM >>> Bill, I echo Kurt's question and add another. There is a rule about not nominating recordings which are considered "lost". But what about nominating recordings of which the primary master is missing or the loaction is unknown? Will this institute a search for the primary master, or the best available copies? David N. Lewis Assistant Classical Editor All Media Guide 301 E. Liberty Suite 400 Ann Arbor, MI 48104 davlew@xxxxxxxxxxxx Bill, are privately held recordings allowed to be nominated? If so, and if they are admitted to the registry, what would it mean for the owner? Is there some obligation to preserve? Would it be like owning a registered historical building? Would it prevent you from doing something with/to the artifact? Kurt & Diane Nauck c/o Nauck's Vintage Records 22004 Sherrod Ln. Spring, TX 77389 Website: www.78rpm.com E-Mail: nauck@xxxxxxxxx Phone: (281) 288-7826 Fax: (425) 930-6862 - For subscription instructions, see the ARSC home page http://www.arsc-audio.org/arsclist.html Copyright of individual posting is owned by the author of the posting and permission to re-transmit or publish a post must be secured from the author of the post. - For subscription instructions, see the ARSC home page http://www.arsc-audio.org/arsclist.html Copyright of individual posting is owned by the author of the posting and permission to re-transmit or publish a post must be secured from the author of the post. |