Recording ourselves speaking the text of a 1945 broadcast
Posted: Tue Jan 05, 2016 11:58 am
Hi all,
I work for a public library. One of my colleagues wants to video a number of us speaking extracts of Richard Dimbleby's 1945 broadcast from Belsen which first went out on the BBC Home Service on 19th April 1945.
No full transcript is available online, only the full broadcast. So my colleague transcribed the broadcast text direct from that full broadcast, and I double-checked it.
The extracts will make up a whole recording of the original, but spoken by different people. No changes have been made to the text.
My question is the inevitable one: can we do this, without seeking permission from the BBC? My colleague's research suggests that the copyright for the transcript would have been held by the BBC, and would have run out 50 years after its first broadcast. Is this true?
We are intending to show these videos in libraries around the Borough on Holocaust Memorial Day. No money will be made from the exercise.
Thanks.
I work for a public library. One of my colleagues wants to video a number of us speaking extracts of Richard Dimbleby's 1945 broadcast from Belsen which first went out on the BBC Home Service on 19th April 1945.
No full transcript is available online, only the full broadcast. So my colleague transcribed the broadcast text direct from that full broadcast, and I double-checked it.
The extracts will make up a whole recording of the original, but spoken by different people. No changes have been made to the text.
My question is the inevitable one: can we do this, without seeking permission from the BBC? My colleague's research suggests that the copyright for the transcript would have been held by the BBC, and would have run out 50 years after its first broadcast. Is this true?
We are intending to show these videos in libraries around the Borough on Holocaust Memorial Day. No money will be made from the exercise.
Thanks.