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Archives and Research Centre for Ethnomusicology (A.R.C.E.)

"A.R.C.E. is one of the most extensive audiovisual repositories of the oral traditions and performing arts of India. Housed in a state-of-the-art facility in New Delhi, it functions as a branch of the American Institute of Indian Studies
of the University of Chicago, and is a member of a consortium of 52 major U.S. universities.

Established in 1982, A.R.C.E. serves as a repository for research tapes from South Asian and Western scholars. It collects commercial recordings and copies of recordings from collectors' private holdings. Drawn from 154 collections, these recordings range from classical music to folk and popular genres. Materials deposited in A.R.C.E. are cataloged and made accessible to interested scholars and institutions. Smithsonian Folkways offers the first opportunity for many of these recordings to be distributed around the world.

Among A.R.C.E.'s publications are the A.R.C.E. Newsletter; a volume entitled Texts, Tones and Tunes: A Multicultural Perspective; and The Music of Bharat Natyam, by Jon Higgins. A.R.C.E. also carries out research projects, such as the Ethnographic Atlas of Musical Traditions in Western Rajasthan, undertaken with the Rupayan Sansthan (Rajasthan Institute of Folklore), in Jodhpur. Dr. Shubha Chaudhuri, the director of A.R.C.E., is chief coordinator of the Archives Resource Community (A.R.C.), a network of 13 audiovisual archives in India." - https://folkways.si.edu/archives-and-research-centre-for-ethnomusicology-arce/smithsonian, 27.05.2022

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The Family Mando. The Veiga Coutinho Family.Manganiar Bhungar Khan. Volume 1Manganiar Bhungar Khan. Volume 2Manganiar Sakar KhanManganiar Karim Khan
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