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Re: [ARSCLIST] Vinyl use and access policies
Yo:
I'm responding by echoing what David S. has written. We at the Sound Recordings Archives at Bowling Green State University have NEVER circulated nor have we ever allowed the handling of any recordings for the public listening booths by anyone except our own trained staff. We now have eight turntables. When we opened in 1967 we had two plus a transcription table that we still have and use today! We could never find staff time to make digital copies nor can we find space to even house them if we had them. We are nearing 110,000 separate cataloging records in OCLC, downloading to our own BGlink. Way over 100,000 pieces are vinyl with the rest are CD's, DVD's, and VHS tapes. And, yes, I remember those first cataloged slabs o' vinyl I entered into the collection in late 1967 and early 1968. They are still being played and are still in verrrrrry good condition. We get so many gifts of LP's from that era that we also upgrade wherever possible. We still have most of our
original Beatles, Stones, Doors, Hendrix, Moody Blues, Pearls Before Swine, and Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders pieces. We have to watch out that we never replace those original pressings though for newer repros that are of less intrinsic value and many time have special packaging or label of container info that newer issues don't have.
And then what about the still to be cataloged 200,000+ LP's we (i.e. I) have to catalog?? And the 300,000+ 45's?
Bill Schurk
Sound Recordings Archivist
Music Library and Sound Recordings Archives
William T. Jerome Library
Bowling Green State University
Bowling Green, OH 43403-0179
wschurk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Bowling Green, O
David Seubert <seubert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Lisa, We had a policy of making CD access copies for patrons using the
LPs here in Special Collections. We changed this policy a couple of
years ago and now patrons handle and play LPs for themselves. All
library (and archival) materials suffer minor wear or damage during use,
but you need to weigh the pros and cons of convenient access and staff
time against the rarity and fragility of materials. LPs are not unique,
they are durable, they will suffer minimal wear with properly maintained
equipment, few are truly rare as far as the musical content is
concerned, and there is a large market of inexpensive LPs out there if
something is damaged. We found that it just took too much staff time to
make access copies, so we quit making them. We now have a turntable in a
listening room with headphones.
The staff time that was formerly spent making access copies is now spent
making preservation and access copies of things that are rare and need
to be preserved such as open reel tape, cassettes and lacquer discs.
There is no right or wrong policy here, but you should examine your
priorities and goals as a whole. Doing right by one part of the
collection can often mean neglecting an even bigger problem elsewhere.
David Seubert
UCSB
>
>
> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Lisa Colaianne"
> To:
> Sent: Friday, April 21, 2006 10:16 AM
> Subject: [ARSCLIST] Vinyl use and access policies
>
>
> Please excuse the newbie posting -- I hope I don't come off as too
> uninformed. I'm a grad student at the University of Maryland working on a
> field study at the Maryland Historical Society. I'm working with a
> collection of about 2,500 gospel records, most of which are vinyl LPs.
> I've been tasked with determining industry standards and making
> suggestions for processing the collection.
>
> This list and many of your websites have been very helpful in tracking
> down related readings. My subsequent intention is to recommend direct use
> of the LPs handled only by staff, with digitization done on an as needed
> basis (instead of digitizing the entire collection in advance). What I
> would really like to know is how similar collections are providing access
> to researchers and the equipment in use. I'm particularly interested in
> access policies (number of uses, handling procedure), when and why you
> digitize, and any and all equipment in use including playback, listening
> stations, and digitization (and perhaps some links to dealers?).
>
> Thanks very much in advance,
> Lisa Colaianne
> UofM student
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