You Can Now Download 26,000 Rare Songs Digitized From Obsolete 78 RPM Records

Vinyl-lovers know and play LPs and 45s, but few have the more obscure, earlier-generation 78 r.p.m. records. A lot of that is down to materials choices; while vinyl is reasonably durable, 78s were made from more brittle shellac and tend to shatter over time. For that reason, The Great 78 Project has been furiously digitizing 78s before the music disappears forever. The Great 78 Project is a community project for the preservation , research and discovery of 78rpm records. From about 1898 to the 1950s, an estimated 3 million sides (~3 minute recordings) have been made on 78rpm discs. While the commercially viable recordings will have been restored or remastered onto LP’s or CD, there is still research value in the artifacts and usage evidence in the often rare 78rpm discs and recordings. There are three places where you can download these tracks, but the first two have crappy interfaces where it’s difficult to browse. The best link to click on is this one provided by archiving service George Blood L.P. , which has checkbox filters and thumbnails that make it pretty easy to browse and sift through. To date, the George Blood link provides access to some 26, 000 tracks. And there are more on the way: The Great 78 Project currently has around 200, 000 78s in total. Via Kottke

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You Can Now Download 26,000 Rare Songs Digitized From Obsolete 78 RPM Records

LA beats out SF to host George Lucas’ art museum

Unbeknownst to some, Los Angeles and San Francisco had been clashing for months on yet another front: Which would win the right to build an elaborate, expansive museum housing film ephemera and personal art collected by George Lucas. As is only proper for the nexus of cinema, Hollywood won the fight. Yes, the upcoming museum will feature choice souvenirs from the Star Wars franchise, but it aims to be a serious institution with the money to back it up. Lucas will allegedly front $1 billion himself in construction costs and art as well as the creation of a $400 million endowment fund. The 275, 000 sq ft building will sit in Exposition Park south of downtown, joining the California Science Center, Natural History Museum and California African American Museum. It will house over 10, 000 paintings and illustrations including works by Rockwell, N.C. Wyeth and R. Crumb, according to The Los Angeles Times . Canny fans will note that the future site of the George Lucas Museum of Narrative Art is blocks away from the University of Southern California campus, where he studied as a young filmmaker. It’ll also be an hour-drive away from another sizable monument to his legacy when Disneyland’s upcoming Star Wars Land eventually opens. Source: The Los Angeles Times

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LA beats out SF to host George Lucas’ art museum

Scan of original 1977 35mm print of Star Wars released online

A restored high-definition digital scan, taken from 35mm prints of the original, unmolested version of Star Wars, is now available online to those who are looking. May the celluloid will be with you. Always. While this isn’t the first time that attempts have been made to restore Star Wars to its original theatrical version—that’s the one without the much-maligned CGI effects and edits of later “special” editions—it is the first to have been based entirely on a single 35mm print of the film, rather than cut together from various sources. Here’s a post from the team who located prints and restored the film : Despite having access to the original source, and to all the cleaned footage as the project progressed, I was still completely blown away by the final version. I had no idea it could look so good! Honestly! Way back at the start I had created a comparison clip with the 2006 Bonus DVD on top and the raw scan of LPP on the bottom, in order to see which frames (if any) were missing from the print, and I remember being rather alarmed that it made the GOUT look good!: Creator George Lucas said, in disowning his original work, that all the copies of it were destroyed. “The only issue with Team Negative 1’s version of the film,” reports Mark Walton, “is that it isn’t exactly legal.” Here it is, compared to the official Blu-Ray: https://youtu.be/mo24gFFk7WM https://youtu.be/pFp9bSp-fro https://youtu.be/3Wjx01CuqDs

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Scan of original 1977 35mm print of Star Wars released online