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#065 A Brief History of the BBC’s Archives

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Manage episode 359745647 series 2711511
Content provided by Paul Kerensa. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Paul Kerensa or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Episode 65 welcomes the BBC's only ever Sound Archivist (the title changed a few times), Simon Rooks. For 33 years he was lost in the archives and now he's found his way out, he's here to tell us the way.

This episode is more interview than usual, including a whizzthrough 100 years of the BBC Sound Archive - from no recordings to the first recordings, Lance Sieveking's re-enactments and Leslie Baily's archive gathering, Marie Slocombe and Lynton Fletcher's channelling of Marie Kondo, location actuality recordings, the first retake and recording from a WW2 bombing mission... and that's all just in the first two decades!

Simon guides us all the way through to BBC7 and the present day - if you love old radio, it's a fascinating insight. Thanks Simon - and thanks to you and the team for looking after it for all these years.

Elsewhere, our timeline of British broadcasting's origin story continues, covering March 16th-26th 1923 - which happens to include the first BBC music library under Frank Hook. And the archive is off... So as we traverse the early tale of the Beeb, this is the perfect episode to go deeper into the tale of the archive than you've probably ever gone before (I should add we're mostly talking about the Sound Archive here. As for the Written Archives, the Television Archive - one day...)

Plus one of my favourite stories about the early BBC, involving an Archbishop, a bit of Schubert and All-Request Monday.

I hope you enjoy this episode as much as I did putting it together. Happy listening!

SHOWNOTES:

LOTS of extra things you could listen to if you hunger for more...

Thanks for listening. Do rate/review if you like, if you like it. And subscribe so that you get future episodes, including...

NEXT TIME: News, the first daily weather and SOS broadcasts in late March 1923 - with more great guests.

https://www.paulkerensa.com/oldradio

  continue reading

90 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 359745647 series 2711511
Content provided by Paul Kerensa. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Paul Kerensa or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Episode 65 welcomes the BBC's only ever Sound Archivist (the title changed a few times), Simon Rooks. For 33 years he was lost in the archives and now he's found his way out, he's here to tell us the way.

This episode is more interview than usual, including a whizzthrough 100 years of the BBC Sound Archive - from no recordings to the first recordings, Lance Sieveking's re-enactments and Leslie Baily's archive gathering, Marie Slocombe and Lynton Fletcher's channelling of Marie Kondo, location actuality recordings, the first retake and recording from a WW2 bombing mission... and that's all just in the first two decades!

Simon guides us all the way through to BBC7 and the present day - if you love old radio, it's a fascinating insight. Thanks Simon - and thanks to you and the team for looking after it for all these years.

Elsewhere, our timeline of British broadcasting's origin story continues, covering March 16th-26th 1923 - which happens to include the first BBC music library under Frank Hook. And the archive is off... So as we traverse the early tale of the Beeb, this is the perfect episode to go deeper into the tale of the archive than you've probably ever gone before (I should add we're mostly talking about the Sound Archive here. As for the Written Archives, the Television Archive - one day...)

Plus one of my favourite stories about the early BBC, involving an Archbishop, a bit of Schubert and All-Request Monday.

I hope you enjoy this episode as much as I did putting it together. Happy listening!

SHOWNOTES:

LOTS of extra things you could listen to if you hunger for more...

Thanks for listening. Do rate/review if you like, if you like it. And subscribe so that you get future episodes, including...

NEXT TIME: News, the first daily weather and SOS broadcasts in late March 1923 - with more great guests.

https://www.paulkerensa.com/oldradio

  continue reading

90 episodes

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