01712nas a2200229 4500000000100000000000100001000000100002008004100003260000800044653003300052653001000085653002400095653002300119653000900142100002200151245011400173856015400287300001200441490000700453520100200460022002001462 2021 d capr10aIntangible cultural heritage10aMusic10aauthorised archives10aCommunity archives10aloss1 aLauren Istvandity00aHow does music heritage get lost? Examining cultural heritage loss in community and authorised music archives uhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85088242183&doi=10.1080%2f13527258.2020.1795904&partnerID=40&md5=0dcea7970074c27a1feb3599c4c04094 a331-3430 v273 aWhile the mission of many community archives is often to exhaustively collect and preserve material of their topic area, it is inevitable that some heritage will not be recovered. Lost heritage impacts both public and academic communities where it results in incomplete histories, missing records and restricted access to precarious intangible and physical resources. Heritage will always get lost–but what processes lead to this? This paper outlines some of the ways in which heritage is lost on its journey through private possession, community archives, and institutionalised collections. Archives of intangible cultural heritage, such as music, face particular challenges in preserving the material past of an intangible heritage. This paper uses a case study to describe instances of potential and actual heritage loss found through a joint project between a community archive and an institutional repository working towards the preservation of local jazz heritage in Queensland, Australia. a13527258 (ISSN)