1st Edition

Foundations in Music Bibliography

By Richard D Green Copyright 1993

    As more and more music literature is published each year, librarians, scholars, and bibliographers are turning to music bibliography to retain control over the flood of information. Based on the Conference of Music Bibliography, this timely book provides vital information on the most important aspects of the scholarly practice of music bibliography. Foundations in Music Bibliography provides librarians with great insight into bibliographic issues they face every day including bibliographic control of primary and secondary sources, the emergence of enumerative and analytical bibliography, bibliographic instruction, and bibliographic lacunae.

    Foundations in Music Bibliography features the perspectives of prominent scholars and music librarians on contemporary issues in music bibliography often encountered by music librarians. It offers practical insights and includes chapters on teaching students how to use microcomputer programs to search music bibliographies, organizing a graduate course in music bibliography, and researching film music bibliography. The book also provides a supplement to Steven D. Westcott’s A Comprehensive Bibliography of Music for Film and Television.

    This insightful volume demonstrates the many ways that bibliography relates music publications to each other and endows grander meaning to individual scholarly observations. Some of the fascinating topics covered by Foundations in Music Bibliography include:

    • the history of thematic catalogs
    • indexing Gregorian chant manuscripts
    • general principles of bibliographic instruction
    • analyses of Debussy
    • discographies
    • musical ephemera and their importance in various types of musicological research
    • bibliographical lacunae (i.e. lack of access to visual sources, failure to control primary sources, and lack of communication with the rest of the performing arts)

      Foundations in Music Bibliography shows librarians how bibliography can be used to help music students and researchers find the information they need among the innumerable available sources. It is an indispensable asset to the shelves of all music reference libraries that wish to provide their patrons with the latest bibliographic tools.

    Contents Introduction
    • The Varieties and Uses of Music Bibliography
    • The Thematic Catalogue in Music: Further Reflections on Its Past, Present, and Future
    • Scholarly Editions: Their Character and Bibliographic Description
    • “Perfuming the Air With Music”: The Need for Film Music Bibliography
    • Supplement to Steven D. Westcott’s A Comprehensive Bibliography of Music for Film and Television (ital)
    • General Principles of Bibliographic Instruction
    • Music Library Association Projects on Bibliographic Instruction
    • Music Bibliographic Instruction on Microcomputers: Part I
    • Music Bibliographic Instruction on Microcomputers: Part II
    • Integrating Library User Education with the Undergraduate Music History Sequence
    • Teaching Bibliography to Performers in a University School of Music
    • A Core Literature for Music Bibliography
    • The Problem of Definitive Identification in the Indexing of Hymn Tunes
    • The Cataloging of Chant Manuscripts as an Aid to Critical Editions and Chant History
    • The Rossini Thematic Catalog: When Does Bibliographical Access Become Bibliographical Excess?
    • Italian Music and Lyric Poetry of the Renaissance
    • Discography: Discipline and Musical Ally
    • Varieties of Analysis: Through the Analytical Sieve and Beyond
    • Musical Ephemera: Some Thoughts About Types, Controls, Access
    • Reference Lacunae: Results of an Informal Survey of What Librarians Want
    • The Bio-Bibliography Series
    • Three Bibliographic Lacunae
    • Index

    Biography

    Richard D Green