The Europeana Music Collections presented at EVA/MINERVA 2015 http://www.digital-heritage.org.il/program2015.html on 2015-11-09
These slides supported a presentation of the Europeana Music Collections, built on the Europeana platform, as part of a session on making audio-visual collections from libraries, archives and museums more available online.
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The Europeana Music Collections
1. The Europeana Music
Collections
Discover the music collections of Europe!
David Haskiya | EVA/MINERVA, Jerusalem, 2015-11-09
Danse de trois faunes et trois
bacchantes, Hieronymus Hopfer,
Bibliothèque municipale de Lyon ,
Public Domain
2. Outline of my talk
• An introduction to Europeana Collections
• An explanation of what thematic collections are
• A more in-depth presentation of the Europeana Music Collections
• Target audience and personas
• Content overview
• Demo
• Launch timeline and future developments
• How to get involved
Europeana Music Collections
CC BY-SA
5. Europeana Collections
• Updated design and branding
• Improved media facets to find and download content that meet specific
technical quality criteria (combinable with copyright)
• Thematic collections capability added (Music being the first of them!)
• Introduction of browse functionalities
• Aim is to meld discovery, curated exhibitions, blog posts and, later, user
contributions into one coherent user experience
What is it? How does it differ from the current portal?
Europeana Music Collections
CC BY-SA
6. Thematic Collections
• Subsets of high-quality thematic content matching a theme with their own
curated landing pages that make them into “mini-portals” of their own
• To make the Europeana platform into an active publication platform for
our partners and to allow for more focused targeting of audiences
• To begin with 4 - 6. If they work well between 12 -18 by 2020.
• First 4 will be on the themes of 1. Music 2. Art History 3. Fashion and 4.
Newspapers.
What are they? Why are you creating them? How many will be created?
Europeana Music Collections
CC BY-SA
9. The Music Collections
• Music recordings. Mostly classical music and folk music.
• Sheet music (printed and manuscripts) and libretti
• Images - prints, paintings, photographs, etc. - of musical instruments,
composers, performers and performances
• Books and other texts about the history of music, composers and
performers (small amounts)
• Newsreels and other moving image recordings (minimal amounts)
• NOTE: Only records with direct media links will be featured in the thematic
collections
Europeana Music Collections
CC BY-SA
10. Let’s do a live demo!
(What could go wrong?)
Link is http://music.europeana.eu
National Library of France, Public Domain
Agence de presse Mondial Photo-Presse,
Tournoi royal de motos à Londres :
changement d'une roue de side-car en
marche
11. Launch timeline
• August - public Alpha
• Mid-December, Beta release
• February 2016 - 1.0 release
• Further releases throughout 2016
• A larger release every 3-4 months
• Monthly smaller releases
Milestones
Sainte Cécile chantant les louanges de Dieu,
Etienne Picart, Bibliothèque municipale de Lyon,
Public Domain
Europeana Music Collections
CC BY-SA
12. Future developments
• Improved CMS
• Improved exhibitions
• User annotations and collections
• Improved search (entity & content
based)
• Browse by entities (people, subjects,
places)
• More HQ content needed!
Europeana Music Collections
CC BY-SA
Mary Garden dans le rôle de Mélisande dans "Pelléas
et Mélisande" de Claude Debussy / d'après un cliché
Berger (1904), National Library of France, Public
Domain
13. Get involved!
• Share: provide (music related) data.
Direct links to media a must!
• Curate: Blog posts, Exhibitions,
SoundCloud and other social media
• Collaborate: Help manage and curate
the music collections
• Contact for the Music Collections:
Richard Ranft, British Library (richard.
ranft at bl.uk),
http://www.europeanasounds.eu/
Europeana Music Collections
CC BY-SA
14. 09 November 2015
The Music Lesson, Louis Moritz,
1808, Rijksmuseum , Public Domain
15. Joys and sorrows...
• Joy: So much wonderful music!
• Sorrow: But very much of it locked-in by copyright and we have no fair use
laws to compensate. And we lack video recordings almost entirely. We also
have too little sheet music.
• Joy: Such variety of genres and resource types
• Sorrow: But we have no massively multi-lingual vocabulary for them
• Joy: Sound recording quality is high
• Sorrow: But many are in formats unsuitable for both the web and
preservation
• Joy: There are huge crowdsourced resources like the Petrucci Library
• Sorrow: But we have no policy on if we can harvest them. GLAM-sector
wariness towards crowdsourced content an issue.
Europeana Music Collections
CC BY-SA