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Music

Help finding scores, sound recordings, books, articles, and more.

Search for Scores and Sound Recordings

Romeo and Juliet

How to Find Music in the Library

1.  To find music in the libraries, go to the library's homepage, and in the main search bar, type in as much as you know about the music. For example, you can include title, key, opus number, publisher or performer information. Hit enter.

2. In the results, click the link on the bottom of the "Books & Media" box to "view all results".

3. Use the filters on the left to refine your search. You can specify that you want printed music (score), sound recording, or video recording. You can also specify if you want to limit to only online resources under "availability". Under "Resource Type" you can select "scores" for printed music, or "audio" for sound recordings and more.

4. Once you have found the piece you're looking for, click on the result and look directly under the title where the "uniform title" is listed. The uniform title is how the library catalogue refers to works with more than one possible title, including works whose originally titles are not in English or works with generic titles like "Symphony" or "Sonata." Click on the uniform title to find all items with that title, and filter again for the resource type you want (e.g., scores, audio, etc.). Now you can search editions, score types, and recordings and find the exact item you want.

Tips:

***Try using the English plural of a generic title, such as symphonies or sonatas, instead of the singular version of the term. 

***Check the catalogue record for scores for publisher, date, score type, and other relevant information to make sure it is the type of score you want. For example, the study score in the image above won't work for you if you need a conductor's score!

***You can use the same method for finding the uniform title for a piece to find the library's preferred spelling for composers' names (see above: Tchaikovsky).

***If you use connector words, such as AND, OR, be sure to capitalize them in this search.

 

Browse the Shelves!

Music materials at Charles Library, Temple University's main library, can be found on the fourth floor under the call numbers M, ML, and MT. Find the call number for your instrument and browse the stacks for music to play! My favorite section is M1503, the opera vocal scores. Enjoy the vast resources available for you at Temple University Libraries!

M – Music Scores
ML – Books, information about music
(see the "Find Books" tab for more information about ML and MT call numbers)
MT – Music Education and Theory

More details about the Library of Congress classification for music.

CALL NUMBERS FOR PRINTED MUSIC - M

  • M 1-3 Anthologies, including composers collected works and scholarly editions
  • M 6-1400  Instrumental Music
  • M 6-175 Music for one instrument
    • M 20-39  Piano
    • M 40-44  Violin
    • M 60-64  Flute
    • M 80-84  Horn
    • etc.
  • M 177-990 Music for two or more solo instruments
  • M 180-298.5 Duets
  • M 300-386 Trios
  • M 400-486 Quartets ...etc.
  • M 900-990 Nonets and larger combinations of solo instruments
  • M 1000-1075  Orchestral music
    • M 1001 Symphonies
    • M 1010-1011  Piano concertos
  • M 1100-1160  String orchestra
  • M 1200-1366  Other ensembles
  • M 1497-1998  SECULAR VOCAL and DRAMATIC  MUSIC
  • M 1500-1527.8  Dramatic music
  • M 1500  Operas, full scores
  • M 1503  Opera vocal scores
  • M 1520  Ballets,  scores
  • M 1528-1529.5 Duets, trios, etc. for solo voices
  • M 1547-1610 Choruses
  • M 1611-1624.8  Songs for one voice 
    • M 1621.4  Song cycles with piano
    • M 1621.5  Songs, high voice, with piano
  • M 1627-1853 National music, folksongs, popular music
  • M1999-2199 SACRED VOCAL MUSIC
  • M 2000-2007  Oratorios
    M 2010-2017.7  Services
    M 2018-2019.5  Duets, trios, etc. for solo voices
    M 2020-2101.5  Choruses, cantatas
    M 2102-2114.8  Sacred songs for one voice

Online Scores

Finding Music in Historic Editions

Locating music in historic editions, often published in large collections, can be tricky. These large sets usually consist of music by one composer (Complete works = Gesamptausgaben) or in monuments of music (Denkmäler), which include works by many composers. Try these steps to locate specific pieces within these collections.

  1.  Oxford Music Online: Find the article on the composer, and look for the link on the left that says "Works." At the end of every composer article is a works list listing each composition and where to find it in the collected editions.
  2. Composer Catalogs (Verzeichnis): If there is a catalog for the composer, often the location of each work in a monumental, collected, or historic edition is indicated. To look up composer catalogs at Temple University Libraries,  go to Library Search, do a keyword search for your composer, and add the phrase "thematic catalogs," keeping the quotation marks. Or, you can just visit the library shelves at ML134, where almost all of the thematic catalogs are arranged by the last name of the composer.  
  3. Index to Printed Music: Database that indexes collected, historic, and monumental editions. You can look up music by composer, geographic area, time period, anthologies, and more.
  4. Look up the music in the following indexes in the library:

Collected Editions, Historical Series & Sets & Monuments of Music: A Bibliography, by George R. Hill and Norris L. Stephens [Berkeley: Fallen Leaf Press, 1997].  

Historical sets, collected editions, and monuments of music : a guide to their contents.  This is the predecessor to the Hill and Stephens work compiled by Ann Harriet Heyer.  

 

Find Manuscripts

  • Facsimiles - Add the word "facsimile" to searches in Worldcat and Library Search to locate manuscript facsimiles.
  • Thematic Catalogs, like the Köchel Catalog for Mozart or BWV for Bach will most often list the location of the manuscript, if extant

Digital Collections from National Libraries

Many libraries have begun digitizing their primary source materials. Once you know which library owns a specific manuscript or edition, check the library's website to see if a digital image is available.