Library and Information Services, Royal Conservatoire of Scotland

Tuesday 29 October 2019

Now Digitised! Contact: a Journal for Contemporary Music (1971-1990)

Ah, the Seventies! The Eighties!  It all seems such a long time ago.

However, we've just heard that a contemporary music journal from those halcyon days has been digitised, so now you can re-visit what was new then.  We're particularly pleased to learn this, because our own former Head of Research, Celia Duffy, was involved in the editing of this journal at the very beginning of her career.

The digitisation of the journal Contact has been completed by staff at Goldsmiths, University of London.  It is now freely available at https://www.contactjournal.gold.ac.uk/

Contact: A Journal for Contemporary Music was active from 1971–1990, and independently published by its editors. As with many independent print publications of that era, this has meant that, for readers and researchers operating in a contemporary digital landscape, the richness of its resource has been all but inaccessible.


In recognition of this situation,  the entire journal has been digitised and made available over the course of a three-year research project.  It was led by Dr James Bulley, Research Associate in the Department of Music at Goldsmiths, University of London, in collaboration with former editor and co-founder of Contact, Professor Keith Potter, and with the assistance of Dr Settimio Fiorenzo Palermo and Gregory White.

Such projects entail more work than you might think.  The project included:-
  • Developing best-practice techniques for the use of Optical Character Recognition (OCR) on each article of Contact (creating a searchable, accessible and machine-readable database)
  • Aggregation of digitised articles across contemporary research search engines
  • Digital preservation to the highest global standards
  • The creation of metadata, licensing and digital object identifiers for each issue and article within the archive.
Do take a look!  You might be surprised at how what was "new" then, is now accepted practice.  Or, conversely, maybe composers tried new techniques but they didn't catch on.  You won't know unless you take a look!

https://www.contactjournal.gold.ac.uk/

A Happy Halloween from Whittaker Live! Witches in Scotland!

Happy Halloween to all you RCS ghouls and ghosts!  Click the link below to read a really interesting New York times feature on witches in Scotland or click links below to see items held in the library with a Halloween theme!


The Wizard of Oz , 1939 


Witches of Scotland ( New York Times)!

Did you know the library has 9 plays about witches!

Click here to see list in catalogue

Did you know the library has about 25 items music, vocal score and DVD that relate to Halloween.

Click here to see list in catalogue of Halloween items 

Get to know the library catalogue better and the power to find things via a subject index search!





Thursday 3 October 2019

Hey, Hey, we have a new BSL-signed, Captioned Library Video


We wanted to share the new library video with you - we're absolutely delighted with it!  We hope it will help explain some of the important things about the library here at RCS.
.



You can find it on YouTube here: https://youtu.be/eTmyDRCF-Pk

And on the Portal at the library's Help and Support page:- https://portal.rcs.ac.uk/library/help-support/

The captions can be turned on using the CC button on YouTube. 

Our thanks go to our RCS alumnus actor, and to our RCS colleagues for helping us put this all together!