The Archive Room

Reelin' In the Years - 'Music, History and the Archive Hunt' (Ep. 9) - Audio Only Version

48 min · 1. april 2026
episode Reelin' In the Years - 'Music, History and the Archive Hunt' (Ep. 9) - Audio Only Version cover

Beskrivelse

What does it take to build one of the world's great music archives from scratch? David Peck, founder and president of Reelin' In The Years Productions, has spent over three decades tracking down, preserving and licensing performance footage and interview material spanning more than a century of cultural history. In this episode, he takes us through the discovery of previously unknown Doors footage at the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, the painstaking process of onboarding the Merv Griffin and David Frost archives, his role as a historical fact checker on major documentary films including the Bee Gees and Stax stories, and why he believes real archive will always outlast AI generated content. He also makes the case for why the music archive business is as much about cultural stewardship as it is about commerce, and shares the ethical lines he will not cross when it comes to licensing.

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episode Reelin' In the Years - 'Music, History and the Archive Hunt' (Ep. 9) - Audio Only Version cover

Reelin' In the Years - 'Music, History and the Archive Hunt' (Ep. 9) - Audio Only Version

What does it take to build one of the world's great music archives from scratch? David Peck, founder and president of Reelin' In The Years Productions, has spent over three decades tracking down, preserving and licensing performance footage and interview material spanning more than a century of cultural history. In this episode, he takes us through the discovery of previously unknown Doors footage at the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, the painstaking process of onboarding the Merv Griffin and David Frost archives, his role as a historical fact checker on major documentary films including the Bee Gees and Stax stories, and why he believes real archive will always outlast AI generated content. He also makes the case for why the music archive business is as much about cultural stewardship as it is about commerce, and shares the ethical lines he will not cross when it comes to licensing.

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