March 23, 2008

University of Pennsylvania receives Francis Johnson Collection

The University of Pennsylvania Libraries has acquired a collection of early-nineteenth-century editions of music by Philadelphia bandleader and composer Francis Johnson (1792-1844). Although a free African American, Johnson lived in an age when racial segregation and prejudice were commonplace. Despite these obstacles, he was able to achieve extraordinary renown and respect among the elite of Philadelphia through performances of his band at balls, parades, and promenade concerts. Following a series of concert tours late in his life, Johnson's fame eventually extended through the Midwest and across the Atlantic to London. His music survives today in piano arrangements published during his lifetime. The collection acquired by the Penn Libraries was assembled by the late Kurt Stein, a Philadelphia-area collector of Americana. For more information, contact Dick Griscom at griscom@upenn.edu.

March 3, 2008

Welcome new member, Ana Dubnjakovic

Ana Dubnjakovic is a Performing Arts and Foreign Languages Librarian at Virginia Tech. Her duties include collection development, reference and instruction for her assigned departments. Prior to Virginia Tech, Ana worked for University of Louisville as a Music Librarian, at Herzing College in New Orleans as a Librarian, and as a Chamber Music Librarian at the Aspen Music Festival and School.

Ana earned her MLIS from Louisiana State University and holds an MM in Music Composition from University of New Orleans. In 2000 she was awarded the first prize by the Southeastern League of Composers for her woodwind quintet.

Welcome, Ana!

February 25, 2008

Please welcome new member, Amanda Pilmer

Amanda Pilmer is the Fine Arts Librarian for Fairfax County Public Schools in Northern Virginia. Her duties include maintaining a collection of music and arts holdings for more than 500 Fine Arts teachers, as well as working to bring the library into the 21st century. Amanda has a B.A. in Theatre Arts from Brigham Young University, where she worked for two years in the Music and Dance Library. She is now pursuing an MLIS in Academic Libraries from the University of South Carolina. Amanda currently performs with the Mormon Choir of Washington, D.C., and in various community theater projects. Formally a senior member of Flava Dance Company in Salt Lake City, UT, she also choreographs musicals and show choirs within the school district.

December 3, 2007

ATMLA welcomes new member, Brandon Masterman

Brandon Masterman recently graduated from Youngstown State University with a BM in Saxophone Performance and is currently pursuing his MLIS in Academic Librarianship from the University of Pittsburgh, where he is an intern at the Theodore M. Finney Music Library, under the mentorship of Jim Cassaro. He plans on pursuing his second masters in Musicology beginning in the Fall of 2008. Welcome, Brandon!

November 21, 2006

Welcome new member Nobue Matsuoka-Motley

Nobue Matsuoka-Motley, a native of Japan, recently moved from New Orleans, LA to become the Music/Performing Arts Librarian at American University in Washington, DC. She earned her MLIS from Louisiana State University in December 2006. She has worked for Google Inc. as a Japanese Quality Rater, a Reference/Technical Services Librarian at Notre Dame Seminary and a Public Services Assistant/ILL specialist at Loyola University in New Orleans.

She was awarded a Bachelor of Music in Percussion Performance by Loyola University in New Orleans and a Master of Music by Southern Methodist University. As an active orchestral percussionist, her professional carrier includes performances with the Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra, the New Orleans Opera, the Dallas Symphony Orchestra and the Nagoya Philharmonic Orchestra in Japan. She was a semi-finalist for the Buffalo Philharmonic and the Houston Symphony and a finalist for the Nagoya Philharmonic Orchestra. In 2003, the Gambit Weekly of New Orleans, honored her performance "Sticks and Strings II" with the Tribute to the Classical Arts Award for Best Chamber Performance.

Welcome, Nobue! 

September 14, 2006

The Harold S. Orendorff Music Library at IUP
by Carl Rahkonen

In January 2006 the Music Library at Indiana University of Pennsylvania moved into a new facility as part of an $8.9 million renovation and expansion of Cogswell Hall, the music building. The new 6,400 square foot music library, a branch of the IUP Libraries, is located on the ground floor just inside the main entrance to Cogswell Hall. It features new automatic compact shelving housing the score collection, a large commons area with comfortable furniture, and a seminar room for small class instruction and meetings. The entire library is wireless for personal laptop use. There are new multi-media carrels with state of the art (in 2006) public computers and audio equipment for most formats.

A public rededication and plaque unveiling for the new music library was held on April 29, 2006. The library was named for Dr. Harold S. Orendorff, former Chair of the Music Department and first Dean of the College of Fine Arts at IUP. Dr. Orendorff was honored by having the auditorium of Cogswell Hall named after him, which is now part of the space that the new music library occupies. The rededication service included brief remarks by the Music Librarian, Music Department Chair, the Associate Dean of the College of Fine Arts, and the Dean of Libraries. Richard Orendorff, Harold’s son and former Magistrate of Indiana County, spoke on behalf of the Orendorff family. Members of the IUP music faculty performed several original compositions by Harold Orendorff.

--Carl Rahkonen is Music Librarian at Indiana University of Pennsylvania.

 

Photo above: Richard Orendorff speaks at the rededication and plaque unveiling – photo by Keith Boyer.

February 4, 2006

Ormandy and Television exhibit at University of Pennsylvania

The Otto E. Albrecht Music Library at the University of Pennsylvania recently opened an exhibit titled "Coming to the Small Screen: Ormandy and Television," which displays for the first time correspondence and photographs related to Eugene Ormandy's television appearances and his efforts in the 1950s and 1960s to gain more exposure on the "small screen." If your travels bring you to Philadelphia, Richard Griscom, head of the Music Library, encourages you to stop by. Learn how the Philadelphia Orchestra made television history in 1948.  See rare photos documenting the 1955 Tastykake Christmas Hour. Find out why orchestra manager Roger Hall wrote a CBS executive in 1960 that "the mating of Mr. Ormandy and Captain Kangaroo is somewhat out of character." This, and more, awaits you on the 4th floor of the Van Pelt Library in the heart of the campus of the University of Pennsylvania. For more information, write Dick at griscom@pobox.upenn.edu or call him at 215/898-3450. 

January 20, 2006

Job Opening at UVa

Member Mary Prendergast sends word that the University of Virginia is seeking a Head of the Music Library at UVa in Charlottesville, VA.  The job ad is currently available on the UVa Libraries website.

Indiana University of Pennsylvania Music Library makes the Albert R. Casavant Collection Available

Arcasavant For nearly twenty years, the IUP Music Library has had a special collection of marching band and drill team materials donated by Albert R. Casavant.   This collection has finally been cataloged and is available for public use.

Casavant (1917-2002) was a highly acclaimed marching band educator and clinician.  In the 1950s, he was the driving force behind the development of precision drill, a style of marching where the band would create intricate formations using lines and small groups.  This style became the standard for marching bands at football game halftime shows.  Precision drill was also the immediate precursor to the drum corps style of marching today.

Casavant did extensive research to develop precision drill.  His collection contains materials on military tactics, drills, uniforms and marching.  He authored more than 150 instructional books showing band directors how to create precision drills and many of his published works are found in our collection.   There are also some rare works not found in any other library, including several dating from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.

Three of the five Casavant children became university professors or researchers, working in fields that Casavant studied.  A.R’s son Charles Casavant was a Professor of Music and Director of “The Legend” the IUP Marching Band from 1976 to 2001.

--Carl Rahkonen, Music Librarian & Professor, Indiana University of Pennsylvania

Member Featured at MOUG

ATMLA member Howard Jaffe, a sound recordings cataloger at the Library of Congress, will be presenting a workshop at the 2006 Music OCLC Users Group conference in Memphis, Tenn.  The workshop will cover the details of cataloging non-music sound recordings and will be geared to the interests of music catalogers and reference librarians.  The session will take place Wednesday, February 22, from 8:00 - 9:20 am.

May 6, 2005

More Discoveries from the Fleisher Collection

Coming up on Kile Smith's monthly radio show Discoveries from the Fleisher Collection on Saturday, May 7, from 5 to 6 p.m. on WRTI 90.1 FM Philadelphia and webcast live at www.wrti.org:

  • Eugen d'Albert (1864-1932). Piano Concerto No. 2 in E major, op. 12 (1893). BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Piers Lane, Alun Francis.
  • Gösta Nystroem (1890-1966). Concerto for Viola and Orchestra "Hommage à la France" (1941). Malmö Symphony Orchestra, Nobuko Imai, Paavo Järvi.
  • Interview with Mona Batt, daughter of Gösta Nystroem

April 25, 2005

Fine Violins in Cyberspace: Exhibits at Gettysburg
by Timothy Sestrick

Borowski_smallThe gifts left to Gettysburg College in 2003 by alumnus Dr. F. William Sunderman, Sr., class of 1919, have provided unique opportunities for exhibits, outreach, and information literacy instruction at Musselman Library.

In addition to $15 million for the establishment of a music conservatory, Gettysburg College also received Dr. Sunderman’s music library of over 1,000 string chamber music scores and parts, as well as his collection of fine 18th and 19th century violins, currently housed in the Library’s Special Collections. The online exhibit A Gift of Music provides more information about the bequest, and features images from the score collection as well as an interactive display of six of the violins. With help from Zoomify software and programming by James Rutkowski of the College’s ITT Department, users can zoom in or out on specific areas of each instrument, and rotate them 360 degrees.

Continue reading "Fine Violins in Cyberspace: Exhibits at Gettysburg
by Timothy Sestrick" »

March 31, 2005

More Discoveries from the Fleisher Collection

Coming up on Kile Smith's monthly radio show Discoveries from the Fleisher Collection on Saturday, April 2, from 5 to 6 p.m. on WRTI 90.1 FM Philadelphia and webcast live at www.wrti.org:

  • Maurice Wright (b.1949). Concerto for trombone, string orchestra, and harp (2004). Philadelphia Classical Symphony, Nitzan Haroz, Karl Middleman.
  • François-Joseph Gossec (1734-1829). Symphony in E-flat Major, Op. 5, No. 2 (c.1761-62). London Mozart Players, Matthias Bamert.
  • Interview with Maurice Wright

March 4, 2005

Discoveries from the Fleisher Collection

Our own Kile Smith presents the monthly radio show Discoveries from the Fleisher Collection on the first Saturday of each month from 5 to 6 p.m. on WRTI 90.1 FM Philadelphia and webcast live at www.wrti.org

Continue reading "Discoveries from the Fleisher Collection" »

January 8, 2005

Music Collections at the University of Pennsylvania
by Richard Griscom

Penn_logo_noname As the oldest institution of higher education in Philadelphia, the University of Pennsylvania, founded in 1751, has been the frequent choice of local musical organizations and musicians as a home for letters, scores, photographs, sound recordings, and other materials that document their contribution to Philadelphia's rich musical heritage.  This article describes some of the more significant collections housed at the Penn Library that offer researchers invaluable sources for studying the musical life of the city.

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by Richard Griscom" »

January 7, 2005

Hosting a Chapter Meeting, From the Inside
by Beth Royall

Do you feel the fickle finger of fate tapping your shoulder to host an Atlantic Chapter meeting? Fall 2004 was my turn. There had never been a Music Library Association chapter meeting in West Virginia, and President Carl Rahkonen set out to remedy this. Actually, Carl didn't have to do much arm-twisting, and I had good support from the West Virginia University Libraries administration. A detailed guide from Amanda Maple and many helpful hints from Mary Prendergast made the planning manageable.

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by Beth Royall" »

January 6, 2005

In Memoriam, Yale Fineman
by Bruce Wilson

Yale Yale Fineman (1951—2004) passed away December 2, his fifty-third birthday, following a courageous battle with lung cancer. He was appointed Music Librarian and Head of Reference and Circulation in the Michelle Smith Performing Arts Library at the University of Maryland in August 2002, and had been Acting Head of that Library since July 2004.

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by Bruce Wilson" »

ATMLA welcomes its newest members

Several new members have joined the Atlantic Chapter of MLA this past year. In what we hope to be a continuing feature of this blog, we are including short biographical sketches of our newcomers (in one case, a true Newcomer) so that members might better get to know them. We hope that they will join us in Vancouver and at future chapter meetings. Read on to learn who has joined our ranks and please help make them feel welcome!

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January 4, 2005

Ut re mi fa sol la si ... blog

Welcome to the Newsletter of ATMLA. It's been awhile since we've produced one of these things, though it wasn't for lack of good intentions. For the first few years of our chapter's nascent existence (we formed from a merger of the Pennsylvania and Chesapeake chapters in 2000), Kile Smith, curator of the Fleisher Collection at the Free Library of Philadelphia, did a masterful job of producing a yearly compendium of our news. But we've had a hard time getting it back off the ground since Kile finished his tenure.

Continue reading "Ut re mi fa sol la si ... blog" »