DocumentCode
758458
Title
Scores and beyond: the dark side of audio multimedia
Author
Kriechbaum, Werner
Volume
10
Issue
3
fYear
2003
Firstpage
15
Lastpage
17
Abstract
The vast majority of the kind of music the author interested in is only available in the form of a symbolic representation known as the score. Therefore, searching for and working with scores to him is as important as searching for and working with recorded audio material. As long as one is happy with finding printed scores based on classical bibliographical data, the Internet revolution has made life much easier. Most library catalogs are accessible via the Internet, publishers now usually have a Web site, and many distributors provide curated catalogs of critical editions - for example, searching for all edited masses by Johann Ernst Eberlin takes a matter of minutes. Fortunately, more specialized compilations of content have emerged, like Musica (http://www. musicanet.org/en/index.htm). Musica strives to gather information on all choral music into a single research tool.
Keywords
cataloguing; multimedia computing; music; Musica; classical bibliographical data; curated catalogs; recorded audio material; scores; symbolic representation; Character generation; Character recognition; Consumer electronics; Electronic catalog; Electronic commerce; Encoding; Facsimile; Fading; Modems; Optical character recognition software;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
MultiMedia, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1070-986X
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MMUL.2003.1218252
Filename
1218252
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