Here's a quick summary of what I have tackled and hope to accomplish in the next few weeks.
The largest part of the project has been the database itself. This is the main instigator of doing this project in the first place. I have handled all the composer names and cleaned up a lot of other names (performers, arrangers, etc.) throughout most of the database: composers are done all the way through; other names are semi-done.
Currently I'm working through the notes, which has been way more of a headache than I anticipated. But in the last few weeks I've gotten into a rhythm with those. Basically I am taking all the notes and getting rid of duplicate information and condensing all the note info onto one line for each recording. This is in contrast to the current set up where the notes appear on every line. I had originally thought that they were all duplicates and that all I had to do with delete all lines but one and then arrange them appropriately into the columns I had established (general note, performers note, location note, etc.). What a silly assumption! Many of those lines of notes were specific to the piece that line represented. So this is what I have done:
- Find something in the notes section that can be or seems to represent a title for the whole recording and cut and paste it into the title column. Delete all other instances of that title.
- Move all performers into one line regardless of which pieces they do or do not perform on. IF a program is available, designate which pieces individuals perform on within that note. List each name or group once and delete all other instances of the name.
- Move any other general notes into a general note field. Delete all other instances of that note.
- If a program is available create a time and place note (518) for the performance and recording.
- If there is a note on a student recital regarding the recital being "in partial fulfillment of" a certain degree type, put it in a general note. Delete all other instances of the note. [May reconsider moving these notes to a 502 note later, for now keeping them general (500) notes.]
- Delete notes made that are typically not used in MARC records for sound recordings. In other words, if it doesn't fit, delete it. [This was a really hard concept for me at first. Delete information?? But something had to give and there were many instances of extraneous info.]
Right now my goal is to finish working on these notes through 1989 (I'm almost there) which will give me 8 years worth of recordings to play with in MARC format. I am then going to copy and paste those 8 years into a new spreadsheet. Once I have a new spreadsheet for them I will create two tabs and separate the recordings by recitals in one tab and large ensemble concerts in another tab. For the most part every recording fits one of those two categories, exceptions are few and I can put those where they best fit. Once I have them separated in this way, I can customize a few things that are specific to those types. I should be able to complete all of this by the end of this week. Next steps will be to finally move the info to MARC records.
The second part of my project was to create templates for future recordings. I don't think this will be difficult to accomplish. Especially with all the work I have done so far, I can see much more clearly what information we even have for these recordings and how I have been dealing with that info. I think now that I have this experience, creating the templates won't be too hard. That is unless I decide to create templates in RDA format (which makes the most sense, unfortunately). Even then though, I don't think there would be too many differences.
Third part of the project was the digital side. I have a proposal in my head for digitizing the programs and linking them up with the finished MARC records in our local catalog. I haven't yet explored the possibilities of digitizing the sound. Sometime in the next couple weeks I want to get my hands on some of the articles written about the Variations project at Indiana and maybe talk to someone who was heavily involved in that project. I need to find out who else is doing something similar. What I don't know is if they are digitizing recitals or not. I'm not interested (at the time) in digitizing our regular sound collection.
Researching requirements of recital programs (the fourth aspect of my project) has also not happened. The first part of this project really was very time consuming! This is something I REALLY want to do though. I know the approach I want to take with this, but haven't been able to devote the time to it yet.
Finally, surveying other institutions on their cataloging practices regarding recital and concert performances at their institutions. I have put together a survey and I sent it out to a few colleagues just for feedback. I have received that feedback and made a few changes, but I need to make more based on that feedback. But then I stopped short on actually setting it up as a survey (I originally thought I'd get a survey out before the end of May). Reason being is that I put together a short survey for a personal project and realized in that process that how I wanted to set up this survey wasn't going to work the way I wanted it to. Plus it occurred to me that the university may have guidelines that need to be followed in doing surveys for research and since I want to eventually publish an article with the information I gather, I need to investigate further. Plus, maybe the university has a survey tool that I could take advantage of that would be better than the free tools I have been using online for other projects. So this aspect of my project has started to look bigger than I anticipated.
So that's where I stand right now. In the last month of this project I am looking back at the project overall, what I have accomplished, what I know I can get done in the remaining three weeks, and what still needs to be done and I wonder if this project was too big from the beginning. I knew it was going to be a lot (and one aspect was added by my superiors {part 3--researching digitization possibilities} so that wasn't even in my original plan) and it has proved itself so.
It probably didn't help that we sold a house, bought a house, and moved during my sabbatical. That probably cost me about a month of time. But other than that I have worked pretty regularly most every day. I do feel like I have accomplished a lot and I know this database far better than I ever did. If I can make MARC records of the first 8 years of the database and get templates established for creating MARC records from 2012 forward, that will be a big boost to what was there before. And I will know how to deal with the years 1990-2004 and everything added since 2004 in a much more efficient way.
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