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Monday September 23, 2024 4:30pm - 5:30pm CEST

This session consists of 2 presentations and a joint Q&A with the presenters. The session contains:

➺ Henrik Smith-Sivertsen, Katrine Hofmann Gasser - Re-writing Danish music history via free sound search (Long presentation)

➺ Carolyn Birdsall - Activating Histories of AV-Collections: From Enriched Metadata to Community Engagement (Short presentation)


**Abstracts:**


➺ Re-writing Danish music history via free sound search
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Henrik Smith-Sivertsen, Katrine Hofmann Gasser (Long presentation)
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Since the advent of the Internet mid 1990’s, free text search has been a central tool. First via indexes of online webpages in readable formats, then all sorts of digitized materials made searchable via OCR. However, written sources are by definition secondary sources, not least in relation to media archives. In this paper, we will demonstrate how the use of free sound search has been instrumental in two recent research projects on Danish music history, conducted at the Royal Danish Library.

The base is the tool xcorrSound. Via indexing of sound archives, it is possible to match sound files and perform searches into big amounts of data. Via a custom-built interface, the results are delivered in tables with relevant data, including a direct link to the file in the media archive and a custom-built media player, directly executing the files.

In this case, we used it to identify the use of specific songs in Danish radio and television from 1989 to 2020, indexed across the Danish media collections. From the data we could not only map airplay of specific songs year by year within minutes, but also analyze the contexts to a much higher degree than before. For instance, how a specific track was introduced or how the reception of a given song changes over time.

The tool has changed generally dark archives into vivid and rich resources for re-telling Danish media history. For now, the searches are performed track by track, but the perspectives of AI implementations are evident.


➺ Activating Histories of AV-Collections: From Enriched Metadata to Community Engagement
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Carolyn Birdsall (Short presentation)
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This presentation investigates the potential for better contextualising past histories of audiovisual (AV) collections in institutional metadata and explores possibilities for increased community engagement and knowledge co-creation. It will reflect on the process and results of the recent research project TRACE (Tracking Radio Archival Collections in Europe, 1930-1960) to consider further future pathways for integrating contextual information about the historical impact of war, conflict and political change (e.g. before and after World War II) on AV collections.
Drawing from the TRACE project framework that identified how AV archives have been subject to major disruptions and damage (e.g. to physical carriers/content, archival documentation, broadcast buildings/storage spaces, and continuities of staff/knowledge), this talk will take up several short examples to explore the extent to which historical insights can be gleaned from existing metadata.
Speakers
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Henrik Smith-Sivertsen

Royal Danish Library
Henrik Smith-Sivertsen is a senior researcher at the Royal Danish Library, responsible for the Danish popular music archives. He did his PhD on popular music translation and cover theory, and has primarily worked with European popular music history from a wide range of perspectives... Read More →
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Katrine Hofmann Gasser

Katrine Hoffmann Gasser is a subject coordinator at the Royal Danish Library and highly experienced digital project manager, specialized in the development of tools for Cultural Heritage research and dissemination.
avatar for Carolyn Birdsall

Carolyn Birdsall

Associate Professor of Media Studies, University of Amsterdam
Carolyn Birdsall is Associate Professor of Media Studies, University of Amsterdam. Her publications include Nazi Soundscapes (2012) and Radiophilia (2023), as well as “Listening to the Archive” (2019, co-ed. Viktoria Tkaczyk) and “Historical Traces of European Radio Archives... Read More →
Monday September 23, 2024 4:30pm - 5:30pm CEST
Classroom 1

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