Skip to main content

Home/ ENGL 481: Digital Humanities/ Group items tagged music

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Ryan McClure

The Berkeley Folk Music Festival and the Digital Study of Vernacular Music - 0 views

  •  
    The Berkeley Folk Music Festival Collection is an archive of audio recordings, documents, film footage, and photographs from the Special Collections Library at Northwestern University. The archive's purpose is to preserve the collection, present it to a wider audience, interpret its significance and importance, and allow users to learn more about the cultural heritage and history in the digital age. It is also functioning as a sort of prototype for an historically-infused digital folk music festival and a research workshop.
Ryan McClure

English Broadside Ballad Archive - 1 views

  •  
    The EBBA Archive is a website with a specific goal in mind in regards to 17th century broadside ballads. The site seeks to make 16th-18th century fully accessible as texts, art, music, and cultural records. Basically the main objective of the EBBA is to transcribe these broadside ballads into usable means that are open, accessible, useful, and applicable to the public.
  •  
    The English Broadside Ballad Archive is a database of 17th century ballads. These ballads are made available on the website in the form of texts, art, music, and cultural records. The purpose of the database is to preserve the estimated 8,000 surviving ballads from this era for future generations to discover and study again. Several universities have teamed up to work on this archive, include the University of Texas at Dallas.
Megan Lightsey

National Endowment Announces Humanities Grants - 3 views

artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/08/03/national-endowment-announces-humanities-grants/?gwh=71FC34F326E008A0733AD3762C960D0B

mlightsey financing portable scripts

Michelle Calhoun

The Televised Book, or the Real Web 1.0 - 1 views

  •  
    Alex Wright introduces the idea of the radiated library. This system would allows acess to all the world's communication systems at one time, similar to the internet, but on a macro-scale. Books, magazines, films, music, etc. would all be readily acessible simultaneously.
1 - 5 of 5
Showing 20 items per page