In Spring 2025, we will be offering the workshop to be certified to pack and ship nitrate film that can be taken either in-person at our facility in Fort Washington, PA or virtually. Whether you are getting certified for the first time or for re-certification, this training is perfect for archive staff, film collectors, as well as those working in libraries, museums, and historical societies.
A Philadelphia Legend Lost
Our Film Department Has Grown!
In Memoriam: Jim Primosch
Goodbye, John…
It didn’t take me long to like John Spencer. This may seem a strange thing to say until you know that - at first glance at least - our businesses were competitors. A few days ago, I learned he died from COVID19. It really took the wind out of my sails that day. As it has with everyone I’ve shared this news.
The Arrival of our Endpoint Audio Cylinder Player
This week we welcome the arrival of our Endpoint Audio Cylinder player. Our fully equipped machine includes both stylus and optical playback of cylinders and Dictabelts, playback of Magnabelts, the anti-wow software, and the special dark field microscope for examination of media.
Nick Bergh delivered, installed and trained our staff on his precision equipment. It is the most significant advancement in real time playback of cylinders and Dictabelts in a generation, and the ONLY advance in Magnabelt reproduction since IBM stopped manufacturing the product.
A special delight was a visit from Ward Marston, one of the founders of the audio preservation profession. Ward brought two cylinders to test the machine’s limits- a 1965 cylinder of Birgit Nielsen, produced for the Metropolitan Opera Quiz, and a 6”, 150tpi cylinder in an unusual brown wax. We all delighted on the range of sonic qualities the Endpoint cylinder machine produces with different styli, the real time optical playback, and the quick and easy adjustments of centering, tracking angle, speed, and new possibilities with optical settings.
We join the Library of Congress, the National Library of the Czech Republic, the Swiss National Sound Archive and private collectors as the only facility in the world offering advanced, precision stylus and real time optical playback to individuals and institutions.
My Friend Charlie Churchman
George Blood Blog Post - The Essence of the Original
George Blood Blog Post - IASA TC 06
Wisconsin State Journal - More than 1,000 recorded interviews with Wisconsin veterans to be digitized, available online
Making the recordings available online “gives an opportunity for the collections from smaller communities to shine,” Pfotenhauer said. “Wisconsin has a lot of these great records outside of Madison or Milwaukee, and we can make some of them more visible.”
Dana Gerber-Margie was hired as a temporary staffer for the planning period. She traveled around Wisconsin to assess oral history archives in 22 facilities from Superior to Milwaukee, from Antigo to Richland Center...
From George Blood - Philadelphia E-A-G-L-E-S Recording
I have no particular interest in sports. Never have. The closest this pointy-headed, bookie, piano & harpsichord player ever came to participating in an organized sport was playing saxophone in the marching band in high school. Nonetheless, sports is hard to avoid. About 14 years ago, while I was the engineer at The Philadelphia Orchestra...
Guest Blog - PBPF Fellowship Immersion Roundup
So how does an archivist learn how to preserve audio and video materials, anyway? Some people (like me) attend a specialized graduate program; others pursue internships or learn on the job. The Public Broadcasting Preservation Fellowship (PBPF), a new IMLS-funded program from WGBH and the American Archive of Public Broadcasting (AAPB), is trying to combine a little of Column A with a little of Column B. Through the PBPF, the WGBH is collaborating with universities and public broadcasting stations around the country to provide semester-long graduate Fellowships for currently-enrolled students to get hands-on experience in audio and video preservation.
The first five Fellows begin their projects this week – but before getting thrown into the deep end...
From George Blood - All Music Was Once New
Like most people, like most companies, the work we do has changed over the years. When we started preserving audio collections in 1990, copying to ¼” analog tape was the standard. Digital was still a new, uncertain thing. Audiovisual and data preservation is now the bulk of what we do. Prior to 1990 most of our work was in recording classical music on location – live concerts and CDs. I worked with The Philadelphia Orchestra for 21 year and have recorded over 4,000 live concerts, half with The Fabulous Philadelphians. Though our preservation business has grown more quickly, we still record a lot of classical music.
The Outline - THE GREAT 78 PROJECT IS PRESERVING OUR SONIC PAST
George Blood runs a studio in Philadelphia piled high with audio-visual equipment. But among all that equipment, Blood has a special four-armed turntable that makes him the perfect candidate to permanently archive the hundreds of thousands of random, discarded 78 rpm records amassed by The Internet Archive. It's an ecclectic batch of audio from another time. Blood and his team of archivists are finding new historical artifacts every day, and making sure that they'll be playable well into the future.
In a special episode of our podcast, The Outline World Dispatch, Zoë Beery reports from Philadelphia about how the Great 78 Project plans to preserve our aural history for generations to come.
From George Blood - Heading To AMIA Conference 2017
This week we’ll be heading to the Association of Moving Image Archivists [www.amianet.org] for their annual conference. Joining me are Biz Gallo, Manager of Audiovisual Preservation, Sarah Mainville, registrar, and Nora Egloff, Data Storage Managers. We have two special things to look forward to at the conference. Biz will be giving her first professional presentation since joining our staff. And at Thursday morning’s plenary I will present the first George Blood LP Women in Audiovisual Archiving and Technology Scholarship.
From George Blood - Are your audiovisual archival records safe?
In many ways, in most ways, AV artifacts are like any others you’ll encounter in libraries, archives, and museums. All the basics of care and handling apply – lower temperature, lower humidity, lower UV, lower dust, proper containers, gentle handling. Though the specifics may vary, the big picture does not.
Looking back on the history of what is now George Blood Audio/Video/Film/Data, our first identity in the archives community, Safe Sound Archive, is in climate controlled storage
From George Blood - Welcome Our New Hires (NOV)
Please welcome two new hires, Jenna Fleming and Rafiq Young, who have joined us this month.
Rafiq is our new Shipping Manager. He is a Philly creative who dabbles in everything from painting to experimenting with micro computers. Also enjoys showing his 4 year old the wonders of 80’s animated cartoons!
Jenna Fleming is our new Audiovisual Project Manager. She is interested in the digital humanities and her research experience involves written correspondence in the First World War.
We're Hiring - Disc Digitization Engineer (second shift)
Applicants new to the trade will work with senior staff and Production Supervisor for training
and supervision; experienced applicants will be expected to work independently after training
on our systems; understanding of basic audio signal flow recommended, but not required.
Responsibilities:
- Prepares audio media for digitization
- Aligns playback and record parameters
- Digitizes media
- Gathers and logs technical, process, and descriptive metadata
- Takes photographs of audio media
- Discs (mostly 78rpm)
From George Blood - Radio Preservation Taskforce Conference at Library of Congress Recap
I’ve spent the last few days at the Library of Congress for the Radio Preservation Taskforce conference. The organizing committee, and Josh Shepherd in particular, deserves high praise for the range of topics and voices that were heard. Unlike most conferences where a few people sport long PowerPoint presentations, this one had many short talks. Sessions covered acquisition, preservation, born digital, commercial radio, engagement, and future plans for the RPT. I confess to belonging to a large group of presenters who whined, “How is this supposed to work?” I enjoyed not only the range of topics and voices heard, but the high level of civility and respect. Whether presenter, discussant, or audience member, everyone kept their comments brief and on point, with respectful and thoughtful exchanges. All the sessions were recorded, some of the live-streamed, and will be available from their website.
Here are a few experiences that made the event worthwhile for me...
Atlas Obscura - Digitizing the Boston Public Library’s Forgotten Record Collection
FOR DECADES, THE BASEMENT OF the Boston Public Library was hiding something pretty amazing. A collection of nearly 200,000 rarely heard, unseen-by-the-public vinyl LPs and shellac 78s were tucked away in storage in the library’s central branch. Now, through a partnership with the digital library Internet Archive, these records are about to get a second life.
The initiative will digitize all 200,000 pieces of the BPL’s collection and make them publicly available, as rights allow, for the first time in a very long time. First up are the library’s collection of 78s. These records, which date from about 1898 to the 1950s, will be digitized as part of the Internet Archive’s Great 78 Project, an initiative to digitize, preserve, and study these rare records. “These 78s are disappearing right and left. It is important that we do a good job preserving what we can get to, because there won’t be a second chance,” said George Blood, an audio preservationist working on the project, in a press release announcing the digitization.