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Pioneers of the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Sound Archive

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Simon Rooks | 13:00 UK time, Friday, 2 October 2009

(Audio on this page is broken. Am investigating the fault. - Update Ian McDonald 17 May 2012)

They recorded for Posterity: that means us!

The recent collection from the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Archive team, marking the 70th anniversary of the outbreak of WWII, has made me reflect on the pioneers of the Sound Archive, men and women whose vision meant we have such remarkable recordings to share, together with images and documents seventy years on.

The Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Archives are regularly subject to sometimes forensic scrutiny about what the Archive doesn't have from the past, and quite right too - Sarah Hayes wrote a blog post about this very issue - but today I'm unashamedly indulging in what we have got, and our debt to the men and women of the Recorded Programmes Department of the 30s and 40s.

blattnerphone_1931.jpgRecording is something we take for granted now, but in the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ of the 1930s it was by no means a given. Our first recording machine, a (pictured left), was not installed until 1930, eight years after the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ started broadcasting.

Consequently, there were no archives to illustrate the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ's 10th anniversary and the move to Broadcasting House from Savoy Hill in 1932. The solution was to ask a number of contributors to re-read parts of their broadcasts. Happily, we still have the recordings as used in The End of Savoy Hill programme.

Even with the technology available, there was a suspicion and sometimes prejudice about using recording in broadcasting. Some took a dim view of pre-recording music as they considered re-takes and editing did not result in a genuine performance. When recordings were used for scheduling reasons or to broadcast to another time zone, the Radio Times always noted the fact. At the end of the programme, the announcer would state "you have been listening to a recording" to ensure that the listener was not deceived.

lynton_fletcher_1941.jpgNevertheless, Sound Archive pioneers such as Lynton Fletcher (pictured) had already been experimenting with using recordings for new programmes in Pieces of Tape (1932). The 'tape' by the way was actually thin steel, edited using wire-cutters and the ends welded together.

By 1939, things had moved on. As well as the steel-tape method, disc recording was widely used and the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ had 18 recording machines including six mobile units in trucks and cars. Happily for us, Fletcher was rather good at archiving himself and we have a number of recordings of him and his staff talking about the Recorded Programmes Department of which he was Director.

Here, he explains the three reasons why the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ made recordings.

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The acetate discs made had a relatively short playing life but were suitable to immediate broadcasting needs. Any selected for the Permanent Library (not yet known as the Sound Archive) had to be sent to a record company to be processed into more durable discs. This cost a few pounds per disc, so each selection had to be justified and it was all rather tentative. Typically, a recording of a notable person might not be selected because they were already represented in the Library: the content or the figure would have to be quite something to warrant a second example. Perhaps four or five four-minute recordings or shorter extracts a week were selected.

marking_up_selections_1941.jpgIn 1939, some 200 recordings a week were being made, but once war had begun, this increased enormously: 7,000 by June 1944. Marie Slocombe, Recorded Programmes Librarian from 1937 to 1972, another great pioneer of the Archive, recalled that 'history was piling in' leading to 'hopeless arrears'. Marie's work was celebrated in an Radio 4 Archive Hour in 2007 and .

What does come across very strongly is the very real awareness both Slocombe and Fletcher had of the significance of their work for future generations: they were determined to preserve some representation of the life and times they were living through. This determination was of course intensified in wartime. A 1942 series about the work of the Recorded Programmes Department reveals the clear sense of purpose and appreciation of the significance of their work for future generations. Fletcher envisages the serious student of history or just the curious being able to 'recreate for themselves...the scenes and events that we're living through now'.

Listen to more of Fletcher here:

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In that clip Fletcher talks about listening to those from 'all walks of life': both he and Slocombe ensured that not only the 'Great and Good' were preserved for posterity. As Slocombe put it in a 1972 interview 'we believe, that ordinary people who have stories to tell and experiences to relate, are part of the history of our time and which are worth preserving, in sound.'

You can hear Slocombe herself here:

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We'll be hearing many more recordings from the war as more collections are released and in appreciating the often perilous work of celebrated War Correspondents and their lesser known, but just as courageous recording engineers, let's spare a thought for the pioneers of the Sound Archive whose efforts and vision ensured we have so much to share with you today.

Simon Rooks is a Multi-Media Archivist, Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Information & Archives.

  • Visit Roger Beckwith's website.

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