BBC World Service interview Beatie Wolfe
Fast Company feature project of Beatie Wolfe x Global Music Vault
The Independent Newspaper Scoops Beatie Wolfe recent collaboration
New Zealand Music Safeguarded In Global Music Vault
Monday, 13 June 2022, 12:25 pm
Press Release: Department Of Internal Affairs
Works by New Zealand composer Douglas Lilburn will be the Alexander Turnbull Library’s first deposit to a new archiving initiative the Global Music Vault.
Based in Wellington, New Zealand, the Alexander Turnbull Library holds the heritage collections of the National Library of New Zealand Te Puna Mātauranga o Aotearoa.
“The Turnbull Library is one of the foremost institutional collectors of New Zealand music,” says Alexander Turnbull Library Curator Music Michael Brown.
“The Global Music Vault is an exciting opportunity to be involved in innovative solutions for the long-term preservation of our musical taonga.”
The Global Music Vault will be an offline facility located underground on Svalbard, a Norwegian archipelago in the Arctic Circle. Using cutting-edge ‘Project Silica’ technology developed by Microsoft, digital copies of music will be stored on glass tablets that can survive thousands of years. The Global Music Vault will have a fraction of the carbon footprint of a standard data centre.
The Lilburn works will be in the form of recordings of electroacoustic works and images of original scores. Also contributing to the Global Music Vault are music and audio/visual material from the likes of pioneering innovator and artist Beatie Wolfe (UK), International music award Polar Music Prize (Sweden), and International Library of African Music (ILAM) (South Africa).
The International Music Council (IMC), one of the Global Music Vault’s founding partners, has also facilitated the inclusion of material by two Music Rights Awards laureates, the Orchestra of Indigenous Instruments and New Technologies (Argentina) and Fayha Choir (Lebanon), as well as from Ketebul Music, a Kenyan organisation led by IMC Music Rights Champion Tabu Osusa.
“While the Library has its own digital preservation programme, the Global Music Vault will provide even more backup for some of our most iconic music,” says Brown.
“It’s great for New Zealand music to be included in this international collaboration. Over time, we hope to add more New Zealand music to the Global Music Vault in consultation with donors, kaitiaki, and rights-holders.”
The Alexander Turnbull Library began systematically collecting New Zealand music in the 1960s and now holds over 55,000 published music recordings. In 1974, the Archive of New Zealand Music (ANZM) was established to preserve unpublished material at the suggestion of Douglas Lilburn. It includes unique collections of material created by New Zealand musicians, composers and songwriters, and the archives of record labels and other musical organisations and companies.
“Music offers an incredible glimpse into the history, culture and mood of a country on a unique and expressive level. Being part of the Global Music Vault will add to a greater understanding of what makes New Zealand and Pacific peoples tick.”
The Global Music Vault is the initiative of the Norwegian company Elire MG, with support from UNESCO’s International Music Council and the Arctic World Archive.
Singularity Hub feature Beatie Wolfe's project with Global Music Vault
Microsoft to Archive Music on Futuristic Slivers of Glass That Will Live 10,000 Years
By Jason Dorrier -
June 12, 2022
War, disease, division—things aren’t looking too rosy for humanity at the moment. But thanks to Microsoft, at least we’ll be listening to Stevie Wonder after the apocalypse. The tech giant is partnering with Elire Group to etch the world’s music onto glass plates, and bury them in a remote arctic mountainside to ride out the end of the world.
The Global Music Vault will share space with the Global Seed Vault (better known as the Doomsday Vault) in Svalbard, Norway. The Doomsday Vault houses the largest collection of agricultural seeds on the planet. The Global Music Vault aims to match its neighbor seed for song.
Whereas seeds are prepackaged, music is not. So if eternity is the goal, what’s the best medium for the job? Your laptop or smartphone won’t do. Hard drives last about five years before they start to fail; tape is good for no more than 10 years; and CDs and DVDs last 15 years.
Microsoft was already working on a long-term storage solution—a technology critical for purposes beyond music—known as Project Silica, when they partnered with Elire. The team can encode music with super-fast laser pulses that etch 3D nanoscale patterns into thin three-inch quartz glass wafers. Each wafer holds 100 gigabytes of music, or a little over 2,000 songs. They may soon hold a terabyte and eventually 10 terabytes or more. To retrieve the data, the team shines polarized light through the glass, and a machine learning algorithm translates the patterns it picks up in the glass back into music.
Now, about eternity.
The plates can survive baking, boiling, scouring, flooding, and electromagnetic pulses. (No word on shattering or zombies.) Microsoft estimates the plates, and the data they house, can live up to 10,000 years. “The goal is to be able to store archival and preservation data at cloud scale in glass,” Ant Rowstron, distinguished engineer and deputy lab director at Microsoft Research in Cambridge, told Fast Company.
The Global Music Vault proof-of-concept glass plate, to be deposited in 2023, will include recordings from the International Library of African Music, Kenya’s Ketebul Music archive, and Lebanon’s Fayha Choir. It will also feature Patti Smith and Paul Simon interviews, Manfred Mann and Stevie Wonder concerts, and works by singer-songwriter Beatie Wolfe.
“In an age where music has become increasingly disposable and devalued, this is a wonderful reminder of its long-term value for humanity,” Wolfe told Billboard.
The Global Music Vault isn’t yet committed to using Microsoft’s glass, however. They’ve also experimented with other tech, like high-density QR codes on durable optical film. Future options for archival storage may even include DNA—which Microsoft, among others, is also looking into—because life’s source code offers incredibly high-density storage that can survive thousands of years at low temperatures.
Of course, if the world ends, we may not have the technology—like high-power computing and machine learning—to unlock the vault for a long time. But despite doomsday nicknames for storage libraries like this, it’s not just the end of the world motivating long-term archiving. As we’ve moved information onto digital formats, the limited longevity of those formats—not to mention their decentralized nature, with no librarian to curate and preserve value—is a concern. We’re already losing information, and this trend is sure to accelerate.
Work like Microsoft’s (and others) is crucial if we’re to avoid losing today’s important cultural, legal, philosophical, and scientific contributions. And if some culture-starved pilgrim of the future were to stumble on a mysterious vault lost to time in the permafrost—a cornucopia of seeds and some live Stevie Wonder tracks wouldn’t be a bad find.
Image Credit: Global Music Vault