Mrs Ms Grace Koch Koch

BSc Music Education, Eastern Nazarene College, Wollaston, Mass., USA 1967, M.Mus., Boston University, USA 1973
ANU College of Arts and Social Sciences

Biography

Grace Koch is an ethnomussicologist, audiovisual archivist, and researcher in Australian Aboriginal land rights and native title. After completing a Master's degree in Music Education at Boston University in 1973, she and her husband Harold Koch moved to Canberra, where she taught music education at the (then) Canberra College of Advanced Education. In 1975, she became assistant to Alice Moyle at the Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies (now AIATSIS). When the Aboriginal Land Rights (NT) Act 1976 (Cth) was enacted, she was seconded by the Central Land Council to work on documenting three land claims with duties involving tracing song lines through claim areas and gathering evidence of women's connections with the land. After the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth) was passed, she did similar work for two native title claims.The book, Kaytetye Country, arose from a request by the Central Land Council to do oral histories with the people living around Barrow Creek, N.T.

She presented a course in Aboriginal music at the University of Vienna in 1993. Later, she worked with the collections held by the City Archive of Cologne, Germany that had been damaged by a collapse of the building.

She has been active in the International Association of Sound and Audiovisual Archives for many years serving as Editor and was awarded a Special Recognition Award for Outstanding service in 2008. Her last position with AIATSIS was as Native Title Research and Access Officer. She was a C.I. for the ARC project, Return, Reconcile, Renew that worked with the return of Indigenous human remains held in various institutions both in Australia and overseas. Her many publications are in the areas of Aboriginal music, audio archiving and Indigenous rights to collections held in institutions, and history. Along with R.M.W. Dixon she was awarded the Stanner Prize from AIATSIS for the book, Dyirbal Song Poetry. Presently she is history researcher for the True Echoes Project, documenting the 1898 wax cylinder collection of Torres Strait Islander material recorded by the Cambridge Expedition to the Torres Strait and interviewing descendants of people recorded. The project is sponsored by the British Library and the Leverhulme Trust. Another project, with Stephen Morey at Latrobe University, is a book on traditional Aboriginal music of the state of Victoria.

Researcher's projects

2019-2022  History Researcher, True Echoes Project. Sponsored by the British Library and the Leverhulme Trust, U.K.

Project is to document further the wax cylinder recordings held by the British Library from Vanuatu, the Solomons, New Caledonia and the Torres Strait. The largest of these collections was recorded in 1898 by the Cambridge Expedition to the Torres Strait led by A.C. Haddon. Descendants of people recorded in 1898 will be interviewed and catalogue records held by the British Library and by AIATSIS will be updated. Also, a website is being created with resources from the Cambridge Expedition reports for the use of Torres Strait Islanders. See the following links:

https://www.bl.uk/projects/true-echoes

https://blogs.bl.uk/sound-and-vision/2021/06/true-echoes-cambridge-expedition-to-the-torres-strait-islands-1898.html

https://blogs.bl.uk/sound-and-vision/2020/12/true-echoes-launches-new-research-website.html

 

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Updated:  19 April 2024 / Responsible Officer:  Director (Research Services Division) / Page Contact:  Researchers