Logging recordings
Claire Bowern
claire.bowern at yale.edu
Fri Mar 4 03:45:11 UTC 2011
Hi Margaret,
I don't know of any readings directly on this topic, but what's worked
for me is to treat such recordings the same way as my own field
recordings; log in my main metadata database, with information about
speaker, recorder, general topics, priority, language, etc. Then Elan
transcript at least schematically.
Claire
On Wed, Mar 2, 2011 at 7:38 PM, Margaret Carew
<margaret.carew at batchelor.edu.au> wrote:
>
> Hi RNLDers
>
> Can anyone point me to useful reference works on logging and cataloguing recorded material? I have a set of digitised tapes from 1993-5 and am currently sifting through them, using Elan to log the content. The content on the tapes is varied, each can contain a number of recording sessions, with multiple speakers, across a range of topics and genres. Also quality is varied, in different ways – background noise, tape hum, clarity of speech, various other limitations that were operating at the time.
>
> The log is simple – it links a summary description of the content of a section of a recording to the beginning and end timecodes – it incorporates notes I took at the time and includes a descriptive comment at the start (basically format shifting the log I did at the time, in a word document). What I want to do in a second pass through is to create a more detailed catalogue of the material that will support further work on these recordings – eg searchable tags linked to timecodes.
>
> I also want to set up a ‘rating system’ that enables me to compare and prioritise different versions of similar material – eg a key speaker discusses his art work many times over a 6 month painting period, covering similar topics. Also performance of songs – sometimes the same song performed several times, I would like to identify the best tokens of certain songs and stories for reproduction (for the speakers’ families to enjoy, for transcription and further analysis etc).
>
> I would be interested in reading on this topic, also from others who’ve undertaken a similar task.
>
> Cheers, Marg Carew
>
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Claire Bowern
Associate Professor
Department of Linguistics
Yale University
370 Temple St
New Haven, CT 06511
North American Dialects survey:
http://pantheon.yale.edu/~clb3/NorthAmericanDialects/
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