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Universal Music Group Donates Over 200,000 Master Recordings to the Library of Congress

louis armstrong
Louis Armstrong
Photo courtesy Decca
bing crosby
Bing Crosby
Photo courtesy Decca
irving berlin
Irving Berlin
Photograph by Robert W. Coburn courtesy of The Library of Congress
ella fitzgerald
Ella Fitzgerald
Photo courtesy of New York World-Telegram and the Sun Newspaper Photograph Collection, Library of Congress
judy garland
Judy Garland
Photo courtesy Decca
mills brothers
The Mills Brothers, Four Boys and a guitar, 1947. Photo courtesy of New York World-Telegram and the Sun Newspaper Photograph Collection, Library of Congress
Music from these artists are part of the recordings donated to the Library of Congress

WASHINGTON -- The Library of Congress and the Universal Music Group (UMG) announced today the donation of more than 200,000 historic master recordings—many long out-of-print or never released—to the Library's Recorded Sound Section, which has more than 3 million sound recordings in its collections.

Totaling in excess of 5,000 linear feet, UMG's gift is the largest single donation ever received by the Library's audio-visual division and the first major collection of studio master materials ever obtained by the nation's oldest cultural institution. Among the collection's thousands of metal and lacquer discs and master mono tapes are released and unreleased versions of recordings by such seminal artists as Louis Armstrong, Bing Crosby, Tommy Dorsey, Billie Holiday, the Andrews Sisters, Connee Boswell, Jimmy Dorsey, the Mills Brothers, Guy Lombardo, Ella Fitzgerald, Fred Waring, Judy Garland, and Dinah Washington, among others.

"It is certainly within the national interest to acquire this recorded collection, and all its accompanying materials, for custodial care," said Librarian of Congress James H. Billington. "A surprisingly high percentage of America's recording heritage since the early part of the 20th century has been lost due to neglect and deterioration. The donation of the UMG archive to the Library of Congress is a major gift to the nation that will help maintain the inter-generational connection that is essential to keeping alive, in our collective national memory, the music and sound recordings meaningful to past generations."

UMG has one of the most extensive catalogs of music in the world and its gift to the Library includes historic masters from such subsidiary labels as Decca, Mercury, Vocalion and Brunswick, dating from the late 1920s through the late 1940s. "Music is a distinctive feature of any historical period, and this particular collection of masters provides true insight into popular music's humble beginnings and who we are as a culture today," said Zach Horowitz, UMG's president and chief operating officer. "We are delighted to be collaborating with the Library of Congress to preserve and call attention to the groundbreaking musical achievements of these amazing musical pioneers."

The Universal Music Collection, which consists of the company's best existing copies, will be cataloged and digitized at the Library's Packard Campus for Audio Visual Conservation in Culpeper, Va., which will permanently secure their exceptional sonic quality. "The Packard Campus and its employees will work hard to protect the Library's comprehensive collection and make these recordings accessible to the American people and this generous contribution by Universal Music will help preserve our nation's rich cultural heritage," said Congressman Eric Cantor, Majority Leader for the 112th Congress and U.S. Representative from the 7thDistrict of Virginia, which includes Culpeper.

This gift is particularly important in the context of the findings of the first comprehensive, congressionally mandated study ever conducted in the U.S. on a national level. It found that only an estimated 14 percent of pre-1965 commercially released recordings were currently available from rights holders. The study also found that of the music released in the U.S. in the 1930s, only about 10 percent of it could be readily accessed by the public.

The Library will stream recordings from the collection on a website to be launched in the spring. The additions of these recordings will significantly broaden the scope of the site and enhance the Library's already unprecedented authority to stream commercially owned sound recordings online.

Universal Music Group is the world's leading music company with wholly owned record operations or licensees in 77 countries.

Published January 10, 2011

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