Abstract :
Music is a global and independent language: its main feature
is being performed and disseminated far beyond national boundaries.
The cataloguing process takes into account all kinds of documents
preserving music and information about musical events: printed and
manuscript music, sound recordings, librettos and concert programs,
music periodicals, and books on music. International repertories, reference
tools, and standards were developed by the mid-20th century.
Authority control for music materials focuses on two different groups
of problems: common access points like names have to fulfil specific
needs, and terms identifying and giving access to the musical content,
such as the uniform title, have to be introduced and controlled.
Several issues concerning names need to be faced, varying from the
different writings of the same name, to transliteration, to attribution and
disambiguation. Specific issues concern music materials: access through
generic titles such as “sonata” is often frustrating. There is thus the needto create controlled access points through content-related data such as
medium of performance, musical form, thematic catalogue number, and
music incipit.
Since 1951, the International Association ofMusic Libraries, Archives
and Music Documentation Centres has faced issues of authority control
by promoting the publication of an international cataloguing code,
through specific working groups (on the structure for uniform titles, on
UNIMARC, on the exchange of authority data, and on indexing of music
performances), and through international cataloguing projects. [Article
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© 2004 by The Haworth Press, Inc. All
rights reserved.]
Keywords :
uniform titles , name authoritycontrol , access points for music , multilingual authority control , Unimarc , IAML activities , Authority control in music