Thanks to Robbie and Julian for your answers -- good explanations,
and good info on the links provided. That leaves my other question
outstanding then: How would I, as an end-user (not a someone who
has a roll scanner or puncher), take advantage of this?
A perfect example: I'm in love with Play-Rite's rendition of "Music
Box Dancer". I've gone through three copies now, and the fourth is
defective. So, I'd like to pay someone who has an e-roll or archived
copy to make me a newly punched roll of this item. Do we (end-users)
have a way of knowing who has what, and who can punch what?
For sake of argument, assume that at least someone out there has a copy
of this roll. If not, assume I'm talking about a roll that someone
_does_ have archived. :)
Mike Morrey
[ A large archive of piano rolls in electronic format (e-rolls)
[ is presented at http://www.iammp.org/rolldatabase.php At
[ http://www.iammp.org/rolldatabase.php?showpage=37&sortby=title
[ you can find "Play-Rite 41141 played by Walter Erickson".
[ This piano roll performance is copyright 1979 so you will have
[ to arrange for a new paper copy through the copyright holder,
[ Play-Rite (John Malone).
[
[ Performances copyrighted before December 1923 are now in the
[ public domain, for example, "The Sheik of Araby", (C) 1921, at
[ http://www.iammp.org/rolldatabase.php?showpage=48&sortby=title
[ Any of these performances could be perforated as a recut by
[ roll punchers like Ed Gaida, Tim Baxter and Keystone Music.
[
[ -- Robbie
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