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[ARSCLIST] Monterey Jazz Festival Collection Web site
Stanford University Libraries
Launches Comprehensive Web Site
for the
Monterey Jazz Festival Collection
Stanford University Libraries and the Monterey Jazz Festival announce
the completion of a three-year project to digitally preserve the
recordings documenting the history of the Festival. The culmination of
the project is the web site, /The Monterey Jazz Festival Collection at
Stanford University/ (http://collections.stanford.edu/mjf), offering
unprecedented access to detailed information on the archive recordings
spanning the full history of the festival many of which have not been
heard since their first performance. The centerpiece of the web site is
a database documenting nearly 9,000 jazz pieces, interviews, and other
events representing over 1,000 hours of audio and video recordings. For
the first time, jazz researchers and enthusiasts alike can easily
explore the multiplicity of jazz performers and styles that make up the
collection that distinguishes the Festival as an important American
cultural institution -- including Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, John
Coltrane, Charles Mingus, Miles Davis, Sarah Vaughan, Oscar Peterson,
Herbie Hancock, Max Roach, Gerry Mulligan, and Thelonious Monk, and many
more jazz legends.
Users can experience highlights of the collection offering a selection
of streamed audio and video clips, such as historic performances by
Bobby McFerrin and Diane Reeves, interviews with Dave Brubeck and Dizzy
Gillespie, works commissioned by the Festival, and performances from the
Blues in the Afternoon series. To view or hear the complete recordings,
visitors are invited to the Stanford Archive of Recorded Sound where the
collection is housed. Further, a catalog of CDs or digital downloads are
available for purchase from Monterey Jazz Festival Records,
(http://www.concordmusicgroup.com/labels/Monterey-Jazz-Festival-Records/).
The label was established by the Festival in its fiftieth anniversary
year to issue recordings preserved in the project with Stanford.
The Monterey Jazz Festival, a nonprofit organization dedicated to
perpetuating the performance of jazz, was founded in 1958. The Monterey
Jazz Festival became established as one of the foremost jazz festivals
in the United States and soon received international recognition. The
three-day festival – the longest running jazz festival in the world – is
held annually in September, and is distinguished for weaving emerging
talent alongside the field’s grand masters. The Monterey Jazz Festival
also plays a significant role in music education by providing year-round
youth jazz education training programs and scholarships.
The Stanford University Archive of Recorded Sound is one of the largest
collections of historical recordings in the United States with holdings
of over 275,000 recordings. The Monterey Jazz Festival has donated all
of its recordings to the Archive of Recorded Sound since 1984. The
collection comprises over 1,200 sound recordings, 370 moving image
materials, and paper-based records of the founding organization. The
collection is an American treasure of unique and irreplaceable
recordings of performances by the greatest jazz musicians.
The project was made possible with funding from the National Historical
Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC), Save America’s Treasures,
and the GRAMMY Foundation, and was managed by Hannah Frost, Media
Preservation Librarian, with Jerry McBride, Head Librarian of the Music
Library and Archive of Recorded Sound, and Tim Jackson, General Manager
of the Monterey Jazz Festival, as Project Directors.
--
Jerry McBride, Head Librarian
Music Library and Archive of Recorded Sound
Braun Music Center, Room 104
Stanford University
541 Lasuén Mall
Stanford, CA 94305-3076
Jerry.McBride@xxxxxxxxxxxx
650-725-1146
650-725-1145 (fax)