The Outreach Committee of the Association for Recorded Sound Collections (ARSC) posts the following message.
--- ARSC RESEARCH GRANTS PROGRAM: 2014 RECIPIENTS --- The ARSC Grants Committee is pleased to announce the recipients of the 2014 Research Grants. The ARSC Research Grants Program supports scholarship and publication in the fields of sound recording research and audio preservation. (This program is separate from the ARSC Preservation Grants Program, which encourages and supports the preservation of historically significant sound recordings of Western Art Music.) Project categories eligible for consideration include: discography, bibliography, historical studies of the sound recording industry and its products, and any other subject likely to increase the public's understanding and appreciation of the lasting importance of recorded sound. --- Josh Garrett-Davis --- Josh Garrett-Davis, Ph.D. candidate in history, Princeton University, receives $900 for travel to Bloomington, Indiana and Oklahoma City, to carry out research for his doctoral dissertation "Resounding: American Indians and Audio Technology, 1890-1969." He will consult various collections of ethnographic recordings in the Archive of Traditional Music at Indiana University, and travel to the Western History Collections of Oklahoma University, to research a radio program from 1941, "Indians for Indians," preserved on sixteen-inch transcription discs. --- Jeff McMillan --- For his project, "Discovering Edison's Grand Opera Series, 1905-1907," Jeff McMillan, Executive Administrator of the American Bach Soloists in San Francisco, California, was awarded $600 for travel to the Metropolitan Opera Archives, to research performers who recorded for Edison. --- Daniel Margolies --- For a projected history and discography, Daniel Margolies, Professor of History, Virginia Wesleyan College, receives $500 for travel to the Arhoolie Archives at UCLA, to conduct research on Texas conjunto recordings and the record companies that made them. Margolies will also travel to San Antonio, Texas, a center of production for conjunto recordings, to consult the files of extant record companies. Applications for the next grant cycle must be received by February 28, 2015. For more information, visit: http://www.arsc-audio.org/committees/researchgrants.html Questions about the Research Grants Program should be directed to Suzanne Flandreau: arscgra...@aol.com The Association for Recorded Sound Collections is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the preservation and study of sound recordings -- in all genres of music and speech, in all formats, and from all periods. ARSC is unique in bringing together private individuals and institutional professionals -- everyone with a serious interest in recorded sound. _______________________________________________ Phono-L mailing list http://phono-l.org