Abstract
The article investigates the history of the National Recording Project for Indigenous Performance in Australia as a dedicated network of Indigenous performers, and allied scholars and curators, to protect and sustain Australia’s highly endangered traditions of Indigenous music, dance and ceremonies. It will examine how the National Recording Project has developed into an effective community of practice for the making and archiving of Indigenous Australian music and dance recordings in response to grassroots community agency and concerns, and how its annual Symposium on Indigenous Music and Dance has become one of Australia’s premier forums for intercultural exchange. Present challenges to the project’s growth are identified and opportunities explored.- The author retains copyright over the work.
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