[Table of Contents]


[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

[ARSCLIST] ARSC Awards 2006



The following message has been posted by the Outreach Committee of the
Association for Recorded Sound Collections (ARSC). If you need further
information, please click on the link below. Please DO NOT simply hit REPLY
or post further messages to this list.

--2006 ARSC AWARDS--

The Association for Recorded Sound Collections is pleased to announce the
winners of the 2006 ARSC Awards for Excellence in Historical Recorded Sound
Research. Begun in 1991, the awards are presented to authors and publishers
of books, articles, liner notes, and monographs, to recognize outstanding
published research in the field of recorded sound. In giving these awards,
ARSC recognizes outstanding contributions, encourages high standards, and
promotes awareness of superior works. A maximum of two awards is presented
annually in each category -- one for best history and one for best
discography. Certificates of Merit are presented to runners-up of
exceptionally high quality. The 2006 Awards for Excellence honor works
published in 2005.

BEST RESEARCH in RECORDED BLUES, RHYTHM & BLUES, or SOUL MUSIC

Dream Boogie: The Triumph of Sam Cooke, by Peter Guralnick (Little, Brown).

Certificate of Merit:
Dewey and Elvis: The Life and Times of a Rock 'n' Roll Deejay, by Louis
Cantor (University of Illinois Press).

BEST RESEARCH in RECORDED CLASSICAL MUSIC

Best History:
Rachmaninoff: Life, Works, Recordings, by Max Harrison (Continuum).

Best Discography:
While Spring and Summer Sang: Thomas Beecham and the Music of Frederick
Delius, by Lyndon Jenkins (Ashgate).

BEST RESEARCH in RECORDED COUNTRY MUSIC

King of the Cowboys, Queen of the West: Roy Rogers and Dale Evans, by Ray
White (University of Wisconsin Press).

BEST RESEARCH in FOLK, ETHNIC, or WORLD MUSIC

Bob Marley and the Wailers: The Definitive Discography, by Roger Steffens
and Leroy Jodie Pierson (Rounder Books).

Certificate of Merit:
The Encyclopedia of Native Music: More than a Century of Recordings from Wax
Cylinder to the Internet, by Brian Wright-McLeod (University of Arizona
Press).

BEST RESEARCH in RECORDED RAP or HIP-HOP MUSIC

Can't Stop Won't Stop: A History of the Hip-Hop Generation, by Jeff Chang
(St. Martin's Press).

BEST RESEARCH in RECORDED ROCK MUSIC
Grit, Noise, and Revolution: The Birth of Detroit Rock 'n' Roll, by David
Carson (University of Michigan Press).

Certificates of Merit:
Soft Machine: Out-bloody-rageous, by Graham Bennett (SAF).

Dream a Little Dream of Me: The Life of "Mama" Cass Elliot, by Eddi Fiegel
(Chicago Review Press, U.S.; Sidgwick and Jackson, U.K.).

BEST RESEARCH in RECORDED JAZZ MUSIC

Best Discography:
Stan Getz: An Annotated Bibliography and Filmography with Song and Session
Information for Albums, by Nicholas Churchill (McFarland).

Best History:
Take Five: The Public and Private Lives of Paul Desmond, by Doug Ramsey and
Paul Caulfield (Discography) (Parkside Publications).

Certificates of Merit:
Pioneers of Jazz: The Story of the Creole Band, by Lawrence Gushee (Oxford
University Press).

Bix: The Definitive Biography of a Jazz Legend: Leon "Bix" Beiderbecke
(1903-1931), by Jean Pierre Lion (Continuum).

The Uncrowned King of Swing: Fletcher Henderson and Big Band Jazz, by
Jeffrey Magee (Oxford University Press).

BEST RESEARCH in RECORD LABELS and GENERAL HISTORY

Best History:
Echo and Reverb: Fabricating Space in Popular Music Recording, 1900-1960, by
Peter Doyle (Wesleyan University Press).

Best Discography:
Edison Blue Amberol Cylinders, by Allan Sutton (Mainspring Press).


LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD


ARSC annually presents a Lifetime Achievement Award to an individual, in
recognition of a life's work in recorded sound research and publication. The
2006 award was presented to Allen Koenigsberg for his pioneering work in
documenting the first 50 years of recorded music.

Koenigsberg was the founder, editor, and publisher of The Antique Phonograph
Monthly (1973-1993). His articles for APM and other publications have been
on subjects as varied as the 1889 introduction of the phonograph into
Russia, Lambert cylinders (discography), the origin of the telephone
greeting "hello," and debunking the "Walt Whitman cylinder."

Koenigsberg also authored two books. "Edison Cylinder Records, 1889-1912"
catalogs and dates over 10,000 songs and artists from the period. "The
Patent History of the Phonograph, 1877-1912" contains listings of 2,118 U.S.
sound recording patents issued to 1,013 inventors, and a detailed commentary
on 101 most significant patents and designs.

Koenigsberg has contributed generously to the works of many other authors,
and has issued numerous reprints of early literature on phonographs and
recordings.

AWARD for DISTINGUISHED SERVICE to HISTORIC RECORDINGS

ARSC's Award for Distinguished Service to Historical Recordings honors a
person who has made outstanding contributions to the field, outside of
published works or discographic research. This year's award was presented to
Franz Lechleitner, the Chief Audio Engineer of the Vienna Phonogrammarchiv,
until his retirement in 2004.

During his 31-year tenure at the Phonogrammarchiv, Lechleitner worked
tirelessly to improve various technologies and standards, serving
preservation and access for historical sound recordings. His achievements
included the design and development of several generations of machines for
archival cylinder playback. He expertly preserved recordings held in many
important collections in archives throughout Europe and Asia, including more
than 2000 unique, field-recorded cylinders. One set of his transfers formed
the basis of a major Phonogrammarchiv project: "The Complete Historical
Collections, 1899-1950," a CD set commemorating the archive's 100th
anniversary in 1999.

Lechleitner served on the Audio Engineering Society's SC-03 "Subcommittee on
the Preservation and Restoration of Audio Recording." He has been a member
of the IASA Technical Committee since 1977, and has published numerous
technical papers and discographies.

As a consultant to the Vienna Phonogrammarchiv and other institutions,
Lechleitner remains active in the field of historic recordings.

2006 AWARDS COMMITTEE

Winners are chosen by the ARSC Awards Committee: five elected judges
representing specific fields of study, plus the ARSC President and the Book
Review Editor of the ARSC Journal. The members of the 2006 ARSC Awards
Committee are:

Robert Iannapollo (Awards Committee Co-Chair)
Roberta Freund-Schwartz (Awards Committee Co-Chair)
Brenda Nelson-Strauss (now ARSC Past-President)
Jim Farrington (Book Review Editor, ARSC Journal)
David Hamilton (Classical Music Judge)
Kip Lornell (Judge-At-Large)
Dan Morgenstern (Jazz Music Judge)
William L. Schurk (Popular Music Judge)
Richard Spottswood (Judge-at-Large)

Additional information about ARSC, including lists of past ARSC Award
Winners and Finalists, may be found at www.arsc-audio.org.



[Subject index] [Index for current month] [Table of Contents]