Scarecrow Press
Pages: 320
Trim: 5¾ x 8¾
978-0-8108-3413-2 • Hardback • November 1997 • $109.00 • (£84.00)
Sherry L.Vellucci is an Assistant Professor in the Division of Library & Information Science, Rutgers University, New Jersey. She has served on the Board of Directors of the Music Library Association and the International Association of Music Libraries—U.S. Branch. She also received the MLA Special Achievement Award for her research on bibliographic relationships in music catalogs.
Part 1 Figures
Part 2 Tables
Part 3 Foreword
Chapter 4 Preface
Chapter 5 1. Introduction
Chapter 6 2. Previous Studies
Chapter 7 3. Research methodology
Chapter 8 4. Characterisitcs of Music Scores
Chapter 9 5. Taxonomy of Bibliographic Relationships
Chapter 10 6. Whole-Part Relationships
Chapter 11 7. Derivative Relationships
Chapter 12 8. Accompanying Relationships
Chapter 13 9. Sequential Relationships
Chapter 14 10. Equivalence Relationships
Chapter 15 11. Descriptive Relationships
Chapter 16 12. Relationship Predictors
Chapter 17 13. Linkages
Chapter 18 14. Reference Linkages
Chapter 19 15. Access Point Linkages
Chapter 20 16 Bibliographic Notes as Linkages
Chapter 21 17. Other Bibliographic Information as Linkages
Chapter 22 18. Bibliographic Relationships Without Linkages
Chapter 23 19. Summary and Comparisons to Other Studies
Chapter 24 20. Bibliographic Relationships in the Future
Part 25 Appendix—Documents in the Sample
Part 26 Bibliography of Works Cited
Part 27 Index
...a useful summary of key studies on the relationships among bibliographic records, library catalogues and documents in online enviroments.
— Australian Library Journal
Both music librarians and generalists, even those with no expertise in cataloging, can gain great advantage from the sections that deal with the universe of musical literature...interested scholar-librarians should consult Vellucci's work for her valuable insight...all catalogers and music librarians should read it with a view to clarifying in their own minds how bibliographic relationships are manifested in a collection catalog.
— Lisca
• Winner, Music Library Association's Special Achievement Award 1998