printed music
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2022 ◽  

This article covers the dissemination of musical scores by technical means. The function of both printing and publication is to produce multiple copies of a work or a group of works and to arrange for the distribution of those copies to many purchasers. This requires diverse skills: on the one hand, the ability to print, involving preparing a copy of the music in a form suitable for the printing press, and then producing the copies; on the other, to make marketing decisions, to handle advertising and distribution of copies to individuals or to music shops, and to budget and plan for profits. Since the first printed music produced by Ottaviano Petrucci at the beginning of the 16th century, printing has been developed in Europe on a broad scale. Its technical requirements have changed from movable type to engraving, lithography, and, most recently, the computer. Entries are arranged to cover these activities separately, and then provide an introduction to bibliography, the scholarly study of both activities. Descriptive bibliography and analytic bibliography are recent in the field of music; they have been primarily devoted to the study of the printers and publishers from the 16th to the 18th centuries established in the main centers in Europe, including Venice, Paris, Antwerp, Frankfurt, London, and Vienna. Specific topics have become of increasing interest in recent years, including patterns of distributing copies and reaching markets and music appearing in general cultural periodicals and magazines. In addition, two subjects have risen to importance, the first, the paratext, or matters of design, which is sparsely discussed in connection with music; and the second, the place of music and its editions in cultural and intellectual history. Use of printed music has changed during the 20th century. Employed as a mean for performing and circulating music among musicians, professionals, and amateurs during four centuries, printed music became a support to produce performing rights when audiovisual media became the main access to music. Another important evolution has been the production of different kind of editions. During a long period, publishers sold the music written day by day for the entertainment of specific groups in society and for a specific purpose—liturgy, concert life, house music. Following a growing interest in the music of the past, they began to produce collected works and critical editions that reconcile mass production to the quality of the publishing.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Michelle Marie Bryant

<p>Research into the practical needs and activities of orchestra librarians in New Zealand is rare. This study explores how orchestra librarians and conductors search for, access and manage printed music for the orchestras' players. The constraints of access and availability and the collaborative relationships that enable the sharing of resources are also examined. The research uses a qualitative approach with data collected from open-ended interview questions with eighteen participants who come from professional and amateur orchestras and the National Library of New Zealand. The findings show that orchestras in New Zealand access music from many different sources and the National Library plays a key role in this activity. The groups face constraints in accessing contemporary music (except New Zealand music) due to cost and copyright issues and there are constraints relating to the condition and use of printed hire music. The report concludes that there is a need for a national orchestra association in New Zealand to provide support for both amateur and professional orchestras. Cataloguing projects to increase the visibility and access of existing music resources and training programmes for performance librarians are other areas that are considered.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Michelle Marie Bryant

<p>Research into the practical needs and activities of orchestra librarians in New Zealand is rare. This study explores how orchestra librarians and conductors search for, access and manage printed music for the orchestras' players. The constraints of access and availability and the collaborative relationships that enable the sharing of resources are also examined. The research uses a qualitative approach with data collected from open-ended interview questions with eighteen participants who come from professional and amateur orchestras and the National Library of New Zealand. The findings show that orchestras in New Zealand access music from many different sources and the National Library plays a key role in this activity. The groups face constraints in accessing contemporary music (except New Zealand music) due to cost and copyright issues and there are constraints relating to the condition and use of printed hire music. The report concludes that there is a need for a national orchestra association in New Zealand to provide support for both amateur and professional orchestras. Cataloguing projects to increase the visibility and access of existing music resources and training programmes for performance librarians are other areas that are considered.</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 68 (4) ◽  
pp. 359-361
Author(s):  
Sandi-Jo Malmon ◽  
Colin Coleman ◽  
Treshani Perera
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
pp. 255-258
Author(s):  
Wanda Brister ◽  
Jay Rosenblatt

“Madeleine has real gifts, and is modest about them.” —Percy Buck, Teacher’s Annual Report, November 30, 1939 Madeleine Dring left behind many unpublished works. As the pain of her sudden passing lessened, her husband Roger Lord began to sift through these manuscripts to decide on pieces suitable for publication. A superb musician with some training in composition (he, too, studied with Herbert Howells, if only briefly), he knew well the worth of his wife’s music and set about enhancing her posthumous reputation. In this he was aided by Lance Bowling and his company, Cambria Music, which was now issuing printed music as well as recordings (see Table B.1). The first compositions published were ...


Author(s):  
Wojciech Tomaszewski
Keyword(s):  

Na wstępie artykułu Autor przedstawia sytuację w Polsce i na świecie na początku lat 80. XX w. w zakresie normalizacji opisu bibliograficznego druków muzycznych, stwierdzając, iż należy podjąć dyskusję nad ostateczną koncepcją polskiej instrukcji katalogowania alfabetycznego druków muzycznych z XIX i XX w. Jako punkt wyjścia do dyskusji Autor proponuje analizę przygotowywanej ówcześnie w Ośrodku Normalizacji Bibliograficznej Biblioteki Narodowej nowej, wieloarkuszowej normy opisu bibliograficznego. Szósty arkusz tej normy zajmował się opisem bibliograficznym druków muzycznych – międzynarodowym odpowiednikiem tego arkusza było ISBD for Printed Music opublikowane w 1980 r. i rekomendowane przez IFLA oraz IAML. W konkluzji Autor stwierdza, że przyszła polska instrukcja katalogowania powinna powstać na podstawie istniejącego już projektu Adama Mrygonia z 1970 r., ale należy ją wypełnić zaktualizowaną treścią, opartą o terminologię i unifikacyjne tendencje międzynarodowe. W jego opinii ułatwi to katalogowanie druków muzycznych w polskich bibliotekach i usprawni ich udział w międzynarodowej wymianie informacji muzycznej.


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