LIBRARY OF CONGRESS TO HOLD PUBLIC HEARINGS ON
PRESERVING AMERICA'S RECORDED SOUND HERITAGE
The Librarian of Congress James H. Billington and the National
Recording Preservation Board (NRPB) of the Library of Congress are
conducting public hearings in November and December to gather
information for a study about the current state of recorded sound
preservation and restoration in the United States. The results of the
study will be used to draft a comprehensive plan for a national audio
preservation program, as directed by Congress in the National Recording
Preservation Act of 2000, P.L. 106-474.
Open to the public, the hearings will be held on November 29 in Los
Angeles at the Renaissance Hollywood Hotel and on December 19 in New
York City at the Princeton Club of New York. For additional information
on hearing locations and times, please visit www.loc.gov/rr/record/nrpb.
To help gather information for the plan, the Library of Congress and
NRPB also are seeking written comments from the public before next
year's deadline of January 29. The Library is specifically interested
in receiving feedback from several sectors:
· Representatives of major and specialized sound archives and
institutional collections holding commercial and unpublished sound
recordings,
· Major and independent record labels,
· Audio engineers, whether affiliated with corporations and institutions or self-employed,
· Scholarly and
professional organizations involved with the production, study, use or
preservation of recorded sound,
· Individuals with personal and often specialized collections of
recorded sound, including published and unpublished materials, and
· The legal community and academic or other specialists in copyright, fair use and
intellectual property law as it pertains to preservation of and access to protected sound recordings.
Additional information, including procedures for testifying or
submitting written statements, is available at NRPB?s Web site
(www.loc.gov/rr/record/nrpb) or by contacting Steve Leggett
(202/707-5912, sleg@loc.gov) or study coordinator Rob Bamberger
(202/707-1122, rbamberger@crs.loc.gov).
The complete transcripts of the hearings and written comments will be
published in a report to Congress. The Library hopes to raise public
and private recognition of the importance of recorded sound
preservation by developing a comprehensive national recording
preservation program. In addition, the program will allow the Library,
in consultation with NRPB, to identify initiatives to help solve the
challenges faced by the various stakeholders. Universities and archives
of all sizes, museums, libraries, record companies, and other
stakeholders operate in different environments, and the program will
recognize and highlight these important differences.
Established by the National Recording Preservation Act of 2000, the
advisory NRPB is appointed by the Librarian of Congress and consists of
representatives from professional organizations of composers,
musicians, musicologists, librarians, archivists and the recording
industry. Among the issues that Congress charged the board to examine
were access to historical recordings, the role of archives and the
effects of copyright law on access to recordings.
The Library of Congress is the nation's oldest federal cultural
institution and the largest library in the world, containing more than
132 million items, including more than 2.8 million sound recordings.
# # #
PR 06-217
11/21/06
ISSN 0731-3527