Thursday, October 4, 2007

Draft of Learning Outcomes for Reference session

Many thanks to David King (reference subgroup coordinator) for working with the reference trainees to create these learning outcomes for the reference workshop. Please feel free to comment on these outcomes as they are not final yet.

By the end of the Music Reference Training Session, the student will be able to:


1. Name the questions to ask in a music reference interview.

(What format do you want? What musical style is the song?, Who wrote it?, etc.)

2. Identify the most common formats for music materials.

(Sound recordings: CDs, LPs, etc., Printed music: full scores, vocal scores, etc. Visual materials: VHS, DVD, etc.)

3. Recognize the Difficulties in finding songs and instrumental music, and how to overcome them, Part 1.

(The problems in finding POPULAR SONGS (as well as other musical styles) include being part of a larger work, located in an anthology, in different languages, not cataloged adequately, etc.)

4. Describe components that are used in a CLASSICAL MUSIC title (AKA Difficulties in finding songs and instrumental music, Part 2)

(Talk about additonal difficulties in finding classical music by discussing the idea of uniform title, such as original language, music subject headings use plural form, etc. The student will learn more terms to use in a keywod search, such as opus number, key, etc.)

5. Recognize the difficulties in finding WORLD MUSIC (AKA Difficulties in finding songs and instrumental music, Part 3)

(Search terms can vary in a catalog (ex. Senegal or Africa), traditional vs. popular music, etc.)

6. Name free internet sites (and paid electronic resources like WorldCat) to use in answering music reference questions

(Allmusic.com, Music Selection Resources on the WWW, etc.)

7. List basic music reference materials their library may want to purchase

(Grove, Ken Bloom "American Song," "Song index of the Enoch Pratt Free Library," etc.)

2 comments:

Anonymous said...
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Anonymous said...

I want to be sure that popular music is well represented in our reference session learning outcomes. These suggestions are offered with that in mind.

2. Identify the most common formats for music materials.

sheet music
lead sheets (fake/real books)

6. Name free internet sites (and paid electronic resources like WorldCat) to use in answering music reference questions

Popular Music Databases Billboard.com http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/index.jsp -- charts.
Billboard.biz http://www.billboard.biz/ -- subscription version.

Pollstar.com http://www.pollstar.com/ --concert & tour schedules (searchable by concert/show, artist, city, venue).
Pollstar Pro http://www.pollstarpro.com/ -- subscription version.

Sheet Music Consortium http://digital.library.ucla.edu/sheetmusic/

IBDB (Internet Broadway Database) http://www.ibdb.com/default.asp

Berklee Library Lead Sheet Search http://library.berklee.edu/leadSheet

The Fake Book Index http://www.seventhstring.co.uk/fbindex.html

Michael Taft's Blues Lyrics http://www.dylan61.se/taft.htm

Lyricsworld.com http://www.lyricsworld.com/

Yahoo! Music Lyrics http://music.yahoo.com/lyrics

Sheet Music Plus http://www.sheetmusicplus.com/

Copyright
MLA Copyright for Music Librarians http://www.lib.jmu.edu/org/mla/

"When Works Pass into the Public Domain," by Lolly Gasaway http://www.unc.edu/%7Eunclng/public-d.htm

"Copyright Term and the Public Domain in the US," by Peter Hirtle http://www.copyright.cornell.edu/training/Hirtle_Public_Domain.htm

Copyright Search Databases
U.S. Copyright Office - Search Copyright Records http://www.copyright.gov/records/

Music Publisher's Association http://www.mpa.org/

BMI Repertoire Search http://repertoire.bmi.com/startpage.asp

ASCAP ACE Title Search Database http://www.ascap.com/ace/

SESAC Repertory http://www.sesac.com/repertory/repertory_main.asp

7. List basic music reference materials their library may want to purchase

Contemporary Musicians: Profiles of the People in Music. Thompson Gale, ISSN 1044-2197.
Encyclopedia of Popular Music. Oxford University Press. -- Online edition scheduled for release Nov. 2007 (hmm... that's come and gone).
William D. Goodfellow. Where’s that tune? : an index to songs in fakebooks. Scarecrow Press, 1990.

Muze for Music -- this took the place of PhonoLog. CD-ROM subscription (~$300 per year). Update disc issued monthly. Published by Muze Inc.

Robert Lissauer. Lissauer’s Encyclopedia of Popular Music in America: 1888 to the Present. -- I believe this is out of
print.