2018 Round-Up: the Scholar-Librarian

Annual Review, 2018

St Pauls SilhouetteI am a Performing Arts Librarian 3.5 days a week, and a Postdoctoral Researcher 1.5 days a week.  In this self-imposed annual review, I’m not listing routine activities conducted in either capacity; it goes without saying that I’ve answered queries, catalogued, delivered library research training to a number of different class groups, attended meetings, and pursued research-related activities and fieldwork.

From September 2017 to September 2018, I was the AHRC-funded Principal Investigator for a new research network, the Claimed From Stationers’ Hall music research project.  Since then, I have continued to conduct research and network with the various scholars and libraries involved with this project, and in the new year shall be pursuing further grant-funding in order to extend the reach of the project.

As someone who continually asks themselves, “Am I doing enough?”, I feel that even I can be reasonably content with this year’s outputs!

  • JANUARY
  • Chaired sessions at Traditional Pedagogies, international conference at Royal Conservatoire of Scotland
  • FEBRUARY
  • Blogpost: Copyright Literacy: Legal Deposit (Copyright Behind the Scenes) – and Scores of Musical Scores  https://copyrightliteracy.org/2018/02/21/legal-deposit-copyright-behind-the-scenes-and-scores-of-musical-scores/
  • Initial iteration of Claimed From Stationers Hall Bibliography, (since updated regularly) https://claimedfromstationershall.wordpress.com/bibliography/
  • Book chapter, ‘Wynds, Vennels and Dual Carriageways: the changing Nature of Scottish Music’, in Understanding Scotland musically: folk, tradition and policy. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, p. 230-239.
  • MARCH
  • Claimed From Stationers’ Hall Workshop, Royal Conservatoire of Scotland, (26 Mar)
  • Scottish Library & Information Council (SLIC) From PGCert to PG Certainty: Enabling the Distance Learner (invited talk, sectoral organisation) (March 2018)
  • APRIL
  • IAML(UK & Irl) Annual Study Weekend, invited talk, Pathways, outputs and impacts: the ‘Claimed from Stationers Hall’ music project takes wings
  • IAML(UK & Irl) Annual Study Weekend From PGCert to PG Certainty: Enabling the Distance Learner (quick-fire session) (April 2018)
  • MAY
  • Blogpost based on the session I gave at the IAML(UK & Ireland) Annual Study Weekend 2018 for the IAML(UK & Ireland) blog, http://iaml-uk-irl.org/blog/libraries-reaching-out-distance-learners
  • JUNE
  • EAERN (Eighteenth-century Arts Education Research Network), ‘Claimed From Stationers’ Hall: But What Happened Next?’ (University of Glasgow, 6 June)
  • Romantic Song Network steering group seminar at British Library
  • JULY 
  • IAML/AIBM Annual Congress, Leipzig, ‘A Network of Early British Legal Deposit Music: Explored through Modern Networking
  • SEPT
  • RMA Conference, Bristol, ‘Overlapping Patterns: the Extant Late Georgian Copyright Music Explored by Modern Research Networking’
  • NOV
  • Field-trip to King’s Inns and Trinity College Dublin Libraries, and British Library
  • EFDSS Conference, London, ‘National Airs in Georgian British Libraries’
  • ARLGS (Academic and Research Libraries Group Scotland) Teachmeet at Glasgow University Library – speaker
  • Article, Trafalgar Chronicle, New Series 3 (2018), 202-212, jointly authored with Brianna Robertson-Kirkland, ‘My love to war is going’: Women and Song in the Napoleonic Era’.
  • DEC
  • Article, Information Professional, Nov-Dec 2018, ‘Coffee and Collaboration’ [teaching electronic resource strategies]

Additionally, I have authored 79 blogposts and 5 Newsletters in connection with the Claimed From Stationers’ Hall research project.

Bat printed cup and saucer possibly New Hall £2-00Institutional Repository: Pure.  My profile:- https://tinyurl.com/KarenMcAulayPureInstRepository

I’ve blogged elsewhere about my musical and sewing activities – both essential to me in terms of relaxation and balance!  You’ll find it here:-

https://karenmcaulay.wordpress.com/2018/12/22/2018-round-up-in-creative-mode/

Collage map golden triangles legal deposit

The EAERN Network

I’ve been a member of the Eighteenth-Century Arts Education Research Network for the past couple of years.  Although I wasn’t able to attend the third and final Colloquium, I have followed with interest, so I thought I’d share the link to their latest blogpost here.  It summarises the day’s activities – and makes me wish I’d been there!!

May 2018 Newsletter & Workshop Report

2018-05-02 10.33.16
A ‘Slice Sample’ (read the Newsletter to find out more!)

Well, the minutes of our March workshop are complete, and now there’s a new issue of the Claimed From Stationers’ Hall Newsletter to go with them.

Bat printed cup and saucer possibly New Hall £2-00Why not grab a coffee, and settle down to enjoy a good read?

To read the minutes, click here.

To read the May 2018  Newsletter, click here.  It’s not just about the workshop – there’s quite a bit more!  If you have any impactful ideas or suggestions for activities or other avenues to explore, please do get in touch.

Project Workshop 26th March 2018

RCSWell, the arrangements are all in place.  We have delegates, a board room to meet in, catering and other practicalities taken care of, and even lunchtime entertainment for our guests.  I’m happy to say that we’ve made contact with ALL of the historical legal deposit libraries, and all but two of them will be represented at next Monday’s workshop, along with big data and digitisation experts and other interested scholars.  I won an AHRC networking award last year, and here we have it – networking really bearing fruit. I’m so excited!

FLASHBACKS

Bigger Picture What Did Happen - March 2016TWO YEARS … To think that it’s two years ago since I presented this slide at the IAML (UK and Ireland) Annual Study Weekend: things have moved on quite a bit since then!

TWO HUNDRED YEARS … Lastly, I can’t resist sharing this – a snapshot of what was registered at Stationers’ Hall OTD (on Charles Nicholson Flutethat day) 26th March 1818.  It really is a typical cross-section of music publishing at the time!  Just look – three arrangements of contemporary or near-contemporary operatic works for domestic consumptions (let’s not argue about who had the copyright in what! – see the posting on this blog last month!), and flute duets by one of THE big names of the time, virtuoso performer and arranger Charles Nicholson:-

Bishop’s Overture and Songs in Zuma, Book 1; Burrowes’s arrangement of Airs from Il Don Giovanni [Mozart], Books 1-3; Paer’s Numa Pompilio Overture; and Nicholson’s Four Concertante Duetts for Two Flutes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

It’s Snow Day for Staying At Home – Too Much News to Share!

The last day in February, and Scotland grinds to a halt.  I had places to go and people to see, not to mention a blissful research day ahead of me. Still, if we get Snowmageddon over and out of the way, then we can look joyously ahead to the Claimed From Stationers’ Hall research network’s impending workshop here in Glasgow on Monday 26th March.

Workshop Monday 26th March

We’ll be talking about the heritage collections of Georgian/Victorian legal deposit music up and down the UK, looking at ways to promote it, contemplating the many ways it sheds light on contemporary cultural and social history, pondering how we can improve access to it, whether by finding aids or digitisation, and considering how big data might be used to reveal stories hitherto untold.  Representatives of almost all the old (and the current) legal deposit libraries will all be there.  (This must be a first!  Assuredly, there would not have been a nationwide meeting of university librarians in the late Georgian era.  Nonetheless, the Scottish universities were certainly in touch with one another, if only to liaise about their London agents, working more or less effectively to secure the publications they were owed!  Getting their fair share of sheet music was probably the lowest priority on the libraries’ agenda back then!)

We have a limited number of workshop places left, so if you’re working or researching in this field and can manage a day-trip to Glasgow, do get in touch to tell us about your interest and secure one of those places!  Our recent February Newsletter tells more about it.

THE WHEEL COMES FULL CIRCLE

As you know, every week or so, I check Michael Kassler’s invaluable bibliography, Music Entries in Stationers’ Hall 1710-1818, and see if I can find a piece of music whose anniversary of copyright registration falls on that day.  Sometimes the piece is good, sometimes deservedly forgotten, but all of them tell us something about musical tastes and trends at the time they were written.

Today, as I cool my heels (and my toes) at home on an enforced snow-day, I turned to 1798 to see whose anniversary it might be today.  I found Stephen Storace’s ‘O Strike the Harp. For one, two or three voices, with an accompaniment for the harp or piano forte. The poetry from Ossian‘, which the publisher Joseph Dale registered on 28 February 220 years ago.  As Kassler states, the song can be found in the British Library: GB Lbl G.352.(42.).

Could I find an image of this song, clearly inspired by the late 18th century trend for minstrelsy, and still drawing on Macpherson’s Ossian poetry, despite the fairly well-proven doubts about its authenticity?

Storace O Strike the Harp 28 February 1798 page 1Well, yes!  Coincidentally, I used an image of this very song in my write-up of Sandra Tuppen’s  Big Data talk at IAML(UK & Ireland) 2015.  See ‘ASW 2015: The Bigger, the Better – A Big Data History of Music’  https://iamlukirl.wordpress.com/2015/04/17/asw-2015-the-bigger-the-better-a-big-data-history-of-music/  (17 April 2015)

The wheel certainly does come full circle: in earlier research, I spent considerable time thinking about minstrelsy as it appears in national song collections, and here’s a song that’s not a “national song”, but certainly has links with literary literacy.  I was beginning to get interested in big data, which is why Sandra’s research attracted my attention.  And big data is one of the themes at our forthcoming workshop, with two of her colleagues in attendance.   Isn’t it satisfying when links join into a chain?

Postscript.  Today, I discovered that the song has also been referenced in a new book, Figures of the Imagination: Fiction and Song in Britain, 1790–1850, by Roger Hansford.  He comments that the song is about relationships, and that the lyrics might have been written from a minstrel’s standpoint.  Another book to go on my “must read some day” reading list!

February 2018 Network Newsletter

Cambridge 33 bookshelvesIf you’re signed up to our JISC mailing list, you’ll have just received the latest Newsletter.  It’s a good one!  We have exciting plans.

Not signed up yet?  Sign up now!

Following Other Networks: EAERN

Followers of the Claimed from Stationers’ Hall music research network might also be interested in EAERN, the Eighteenth-Century Arts Education Research Network.  We’re taking the liberty of sharing a fascinating series of workshops that commences next week!  Maybe we’ll see you there?