IRENE Technology Resurrects Long-Silent Voices of Poets at Harvard's Woodberry Poetry Room - NPR Covers the Story
NEDCC's IRENE system recently recovered rare audio recordings of major poets for the Woodberry Poetry Room at Harvard. The Woodberry holds over 6,000 recordings on a range of media that span the 20th and 21st centuries - the collection is one of the largest poetry-specific sound archives in the world.
Some of the Woodberry Poetry Room's audio collections have been digitized and the audio is now available on their website. However, Curator Christina Davis had kept aside the rarest recordings on aluminum or glass-based instantaneous discs, several of which were damaged or in advanced stages of delamination.
These early recordings included one-of-a-kind readings by Wallace Stevens, T.S. Eliot, Marianne Moore, Ezra Pound, Randall Jarrell, and Robert Frost, among others. Unwilling to risk damage by transferring the audio with a stylus, Davis kept them safe - though silent.
Then along came the IRENE technology.
LISTEN TO THE NPR/WBUR RADIO STORY:
https://www.nedcc.org/about/nedcc-stories/irene-recovers-poets-voices
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