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The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts > Collections > Rodgers and Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound About the ArchivesThe Rodgers and Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound of the New York
Public Library is one of the richest resources of recorded sound in the
world. The aural landscape that helps define a community, a country, or
a cultural era can be studied through the Archives extraordinary holdings,
which cover virtually every aspect of recorded sound--from Mozart to Maria
Callas to Motown, from symphonic works to presidential speeches, from radio
dramas to television specials. A vital research facility for performers,
musicians, scholars, critics, and the recording industry, the collection
also plays a leadership role in developing technology that allows for the
transfer of sound from obsolete to accessible formats. Through special recording
projects--often pursued cooperatively with other archives and record companies--the
Archives collection and preservation efforts ensure that the spoken and
musical sounds of the century will resonate for current and future generations. The scope of the collection draws users from many disciplines: critics
comparing multiple recordings of a musical selection, opera singers preparing
unfamiliar roles, instrumentalists studying a new piece before first rehearsal,
actors preparing for auditions by studying dialect tapes or musical theatre
recordings, filmmakers in search of topical songs for soundtracks, and performing
groups in search of new repertory. Rare items such as pre-Glasnost underground
videos of Russian rock groups, Fiorello La Guardias Talks to the People
radio broadcasts, and recordings of famed black vaudevillian Bert Williams
draw researchers and historians from many fields. The Archives contains approximately 500,000 recordings and more than 10,000 printed items. Resources--available for study free of charge--include: Recorded MusicVirtually every format developed to record sound--wax cylinders, acetate and aluminum discs, magnetic wire recordings, 78rpm recordings, audiocassettes, compact discs, digital audio tape--can be found in the Archives. Rarities include the Mapleson Cylinders, recorded at the Metropolitan Opera House in 1901-3 with such legendary singers as the De Reszke brothers, Milka Ternina, and Lillian Nordica; Irving Berlin singing his own songs; and thousands of limited-edition and private-issue recordings ranging from Kirsten Flagstads Metropolitan Opera debut to world premieres of major operas and symphonic works. Recorded Literature and SpeechReadings by major poets, novelists, and essayists and pronouncements by world leaders bring to life the power, poetry, and nuance of the spoken word. Recordings range from the speeches of John F. Kennedy to private recordings of Tennessee Williams reading from his own works. Moving ImagesMaterials that complement those of the other research divisions--dance, music, and theatre--of The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts can be found in the Archives collection of videotapes and videodiscs. Representative items include opera and music performances, rock videos, master classes, and public television broadcasts. Printed MaterialsPrinted materials cover the entire field of sound recording--artistic, technological, and economic--from the 1890s to the present. Included are discographies, record company catalogs, album liner notes, and periodicals. Industry trade publications document the rapid evolution of recording technology and equipment. |