Digital Encounters with
Richard Moyle
Director
Archive of
Maori and
Pacific Music
Although the Archive of Maori and Pacific Music is located within the University of Auckland and is used by staff and students, the last decadehas seen a steady increase in the proportion of non-university users to thepoint now where more than 80% of people requesting copies of items in its holdings are members of the public or students from other educational institutions. Although this bias has created some difficulties of funding from a body receiving Government monies for purposes of teaching and research, the broad-based availability of ethnographic recordings is entirely within the aspirations for the Archive when it was formed in 1970 as a "national institution for the purposes of teaching and research, serving the cultural heritage needs of Maori and the indigenous peoples of the Pacific".
One result of the Archive Director's years
of fieldwork experience in
Under the protocol signed with the New Zealand Ministry of Pacific Island Affairs, each organisation sent a specified quantity of its at-risk holdings, together with a technician who would receive three-weeks of training in digitisation and noise removal. The Archive offered to curate the original materials under separate contract, and made a second set of CDs for teaching and research purposes within the University. The Ministry grant covered all related expenses.
All four
The overall project was successful and plans are under way for extensions elsewhere in the Pacific. On both a philosophical and practical level, it is now realistic to consider framing future archiving directions within theSouth Pacific in terms of clusters of regional archives in liaison with one or more central repositories.