Archive of New Zealand Music
The Archive of New Zealand Music is one of the foremost public archives of unpublished material relating to New Zealand music and musicians.
Collecting and preserving New Zealand's music heritage
The Archive of New Zealand Music is the world's largest archive of unpublished material relating to New Zealand music and musicians.
The Archive collects and preserves New Zealand's music heritage, making it accessible now and into the future.
It holds hundreds of unique collections that document the rich variety of our musical life, from the works of composers and musicians through to music production, education, broadcasting and criticism.
The Archive contains:
Music scores and lyric sheets
Over 20,000 unpublished sound and video recordings
Correspondence, manuscripts, and diaries
Scrapbooks and clippings
Organisational and company records
Photographs
Posters, programmes, and other ephemera
Oral histories
Musicological research papers
We established the Archive of New Zealand Music at the Alexander Turnbull Library in 1974, at the suggestion of composer Douglas Lilburn.
Published music recordings and scores are held in the New Zealand Music, Sound, Audiovisual collection.
Access the Archive of New Zealand Music
You can find and order collection items in the Archive using the Alexander Turnbull Catalogue (Tiaki). You can access items from the Archive through the Katherine Mansfield Reading Room at the National Library building in Wellington. Some digitised items are available to view online.
To preserve original items, we make sound and video materials accessible through surrogate copies. Please request these and other material in advance by contacting us or using the "Request to view" button on collection item pages in Tiaki.
Get copies of items in this collection
You can get copies of items in this collection if donor restrictions and copyright allow. You can order photocopies, digital photographs or audiovisual copies by letter, phone or email.
What's in the Archive of New Zealand Music collections?
You’ll find all musical styles and genres in the Archive. Among the many highlights are collections relating to:
Classical composers
The Archive holds the personal collections of many prominent New Zealand composers, including:
These collections include scores together with recordings, personal papers, correspondence, and photographs. We also hold the records of organisations related to music composition, including:
Concert music
The work of many notable New Zealand concert performers, patrons, critics, and mentors is represented in the Archive through personal collections, including those of:
L-R: Bandsman in Wanganui Rifle Volunteers (ca late 1800s). Ref: 1/4-004894-G. | Oscar Natzka (1949). Ref: PAColl-7796-24. | New Zealand International Exhibition Orchestra 1906-1907. Eph-C-MUSIC-1907-01-inside.
You will also find the records of many musical organisations in the Archive. Notable examples include:
Popular music
Many performers have contributed to the development of New Zealand popular music. We hold collections relating to significant performing artists, including:
The Archive also contains substantial collections of demos, master tapes, and unpublished recordings from labels, studios and radio stations, including:
Funding, touring and further aspects of New Zealand popular music are documented in other collections, such as:
Further material can be found in the Printed Ephemera Collection and Photographic Archive, including:
Māori music
You will find a range of collections relating to Māori music in the Archive, including:
Further collections relating to Māori music are held in the Manuscripts and other Turnbull Collections, significant examples including:
Pacific Island music
We also hold collections relating to Pacific Island music, including field recordings, research papers, and song texts. Notable collections include:
Jazz and folk
The Archive contains rich holdings relating to New Zealand jazz history. These collections include unpublished recordings, research papers, and radio scripts, important examples being:
Folk music is also well-represented in the Archive through field and concert recordings, scores, posters, and folk-club records. Notable collections include:
Sonic arts and experimental music
We hold a large body of material relating to experimental music, free improvisation, and sonic arts, including:
Music education
Here you will find collections relating to musical education, including the papers of notable music teachers, such as:
The Archive also holds the records of the Wellington Branch of the Institute of Registered Music Teachers of New Zealand.
Musicologists, librarians, and collectors
Many New Zealand music writers have deposited their research papers with the Archive, including:
Other notable collections were donated by:
Music recordings and oral history
You will find thousands of unpublished New Zealand music recordings in the Archive’s collections, across all genres from classical, Māori and Pacific Island, to rock, folk and jazz, along with oral history. Audiovisual media range from acetate discs through to open-reel tapes and born digital files. Further music-related recordings are held in the Oral History and Sound collection, including:
L-R: Photo of Unknown Mortal Orchestra by Wendy Collings (2013). Ref: PADL-001042. | Ngāti Pōneke concert party (ca 1930s). Ref: 1/2-180935-F. | Violinists Olwen Castle and Silvia Roberts, with Vincent Aspey (ca 1954) . Ref: PAColl-6303-15.