Difference between revisions of "Attic Tapes"

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The John Rylands library catalogue for these tapes, which calls them BDD/1/1/1/1 instead of DD111, contains a short description of the contents of each.
  
 
The WikiDelia has a page for what is known about each tape (see [[:Category:Tape]]). There is also a summary as single table on the page [[DD]].
 
The WikiDelia has a page for what is known about each tape (see [[:Category:Tape]]). There is also a summary as single table on the page [[DD]].

Revision as of 18:13, 10 July 2016

The Attic Tapes

“When Delia died, her partner Clive discovered all these boxes in her attic, just numbers of tea chests and cardboard boxes all falling to bits, all full of tapes which one day had sticky labels on them but all the sticky labels had fallen off and were at the bottom of the boxes so we were just left with hundreds of reels of tapes and the labels, so it was a real jigsaw puzzle.
   Initially Brian Hodgson took delivery of the tapes [...] and he weeded out a lot of stuff because, basically, Delia seemed to have, when she left the BBC, just emptied her studio into the back of a car so a lot of them were either blank tapes or just echo tapes and just bits of edits which weren't going anywhere or duplicates of things we already had. So Brian did an initial sort of weed through but I still ended up with about 300 reels of tapes.” [1][2]

“When Derbyshire left the BBC in 1973, she emptied boxes of papers and tapes from her office into her car. They remained untouched in her attic. ... Following her death, Brian Hodgson suggested to Clive Blackburn, Derbyshire's partner, that Ayres be appointed to catalogue the almost 300 tapes.
   Ayres returned to the Radiophonic Workshop Archive anything that belonged to it. However, that was just the beginning of a long, unfinished process. The problem was two-fold. On any one tape, there were pieces from separate, and usually different projects. Secondly, the tapes were improperly stored, and the sticky labels fell off. So any one box could have 30 tapes and hundreds of labels in the bottom of the box. There were nearly 300 tapes and the cataloguing alone would take at least six months.”[3]

In March 2008[4] Mark gave them on permanent loan to Manchester University in the care of Dr David Butler.

They were almost all digitized by Louis Niebur of the University of Nevada and David Butler in the summer of 2007[5] by playing them on a 1960s Studer A80 tape machine lent by the BBC's Manchester studios.[6]

They contain the audio for dozens of pieces of Delia's music that were believed lost, including at least one Macbeth[7], the medleys she made for the ICI Fashion Show and the Brighton Festival[8], Le Pont Mirabeau[9], for Hamlet, Medea and Raven and Dove[10], but in the years since they were digitized, nothing has been published.

Contents

Mark Ayres' Initial Catalogue of the tapes records the labels on them and gives a brief description of each and in the last minutes of the documentary Inside Out there is a brief screen shot of the wav files created from her tapes, in which the following filenames can be seen

Tape File name
DD124? [...] crescendos.wav
DD125? [...] material.wav
DD134 DD134 Medea first wo[rking] tape.wav
DD135 DD135 Marlene Dietrich.wav
DD144 DD144 Lion basic voice.wav
DD145 DD145 Brian's backgrounds.wav
DD148 DD148 One Under The Eight.wav
DD149 DD149 Methuselah 3.wav
DD150 DD150 Mozart.wav
DD151 DD151 Left Channel only.wav
DD15[...] [...] Chann[...]
DD151 DD151.wav
DD152 DD152 Military band.wav
DD157 DD157 Hamlet reel 3.wav
DD158 DD158 Dublin Macbet[...]sup.wav
DD1[..] DD1[...] first [...]

The John Rylands library catalogue for these tapes, which calls them BDD/1/1/1/1 instead of DD111, contains a short description of the contents of each.

The WikiDelia has a page for what is known about each tape (see Category:Tape). There is also a summary as single table on the page DD.

There are hundreds more tapes of unpublished Delian work at the BBC, listed here on page TRW.

Availability

  • From 2008 to 2016 you had to go and sit in David Butler's office while he played them to you on his laptop.
  • In early 2014, the university was given money to set up listening stations in the university library.[11] They eventually appeared in early 2016. Anyone over the age of 18[12] should now be able to listen to them by going in person to the John Rylands Library at the University of Manchester.[13]

References