Until I started taking LIS courses, my knowledge of music libraries was based exclusively on my experience with the UCLA Music Library as a student. In my mind, music libraries revolved around the study of music, not the performance of it. I never saw them as having a purpose beyond supplying professors and students with materials to help them better understand various musical works.
But now, thanks to Dr. Patrick Lo’s 2013 article A Conversation with Robert Sutherland, Chief Librarian at the Metropolitan Opera Library, I know more. In this interview, Sutherland discusses his chief duty: providing the musicians with the scores they need for performance. This is no simple task. Many opera scores exist in multiple editions and many singers need certain passages of music to be transposed. For each opera production, Sutherland needs to confer with the conductor, the stage director, and the singers to decide which edition of the score (or amalgam of editions) and which keys will be used. Sometimes those decisions can be altered at the last possible moment for various reasons.
Sutherland and his fellow librarians also proof-read the scores intensively to insure that they’re free of errors, preserve the markings written in the scores by various conductors, and ensure that when those conductors perform, those markings are copied onto the parts for all the orchestra members. They also have the job of repairing damaged sheet music (a necessity when a library has materials dating all the way back to 1883) or replacing damaged material that’s beyond repair. Although Sutherland loves his job and describes it as “like winning the lottery (Lo & Sutherland, 2013, p. 90), he also describes it “relentless” (Lo & Sutherland, 2013, p. 86) – the librarians need to be constantly busy to ensure the best quality performances. He also claims that his background as an orchestra musician helped prepare him for his current career, because it helps him view each score from the performers’ point of view. One of the keys to his job, he says, is to know which scores are the best for performing, not just reading or displaying.
Of course the study of music is essential to all of this. Sutherland’s duties sometimes include such scholarly business as analyzing a composer’s handwriting to determine the exact meaning of the score’s markings. But it’s never study just for the sake of study. The ultimate goal of everything he does is excellence on the opera stage.
Even though the Met is a performance library, not an academic library, I’m sure that academic music librarians have similar responsibilities. Colleges offer music performances, too. UCLA’s Herb Alpert School of Music offers plenty of concerts every year, as well as the occasional opera and Broadway-style musical. Not only that, most music students are actively studying to be musicians (it’s all too easy to forget this sometimes, but people like me who only study Music History are the exception, not the rule). Who supplies the materials that they need to give the best performances possible? The library! Academic music librarianship may not be identical to Sutherland’s job, but I doubt it’s drastically different either.
Thanks to this interview, I know now that music libraries do more than just teach people about music. They also play an essential role in helping musicians bring music to life.
References
Lo, P. & Sutherland, R. (2013). A conversation with Robert Sutherland, chief librarian at the Metropolitan Opera library. Fontes Artis Musicae, 60(2), 76-91. Retrieved from eb.b.ebscohost.com.libaccess.sjlibrary.org/ehost/detail/detail?vid=3&sid=356cd544-71ca-40ce-9afd-9050d454290a%40sessionmgr111&hid=103&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWhvc3QtbGl2ZQ%3d%3d#db=llf&AN=89990716
Cathy Mardiguian
September 29th, 2014 at 14:48
How interesting, you and I had the opposite ideas about use of a music library. I always think of the music library for band in high school or the music library at my church, where music is organized and stored for performance.
Patrick Lo
November 21st, 2014 at 05:58
Hi Guys,
I am glad that someone actually finds my article interesting. More interviews with leading opera & orchestra librarians coming.
Pamina
November 23rd, 2014 at 21:18
I look forward to reading them!
Patrick Lo
November 21st, 2014 at 06:22
Dear Readers,
I wonder if you had a chance to read the following article? It is equally interesting.
It is entitled: A Conversation with Matthew Naughtin, Music Librarian at the San Francisco Ballet
Available at: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10588167.2014.932677?journalCode=wmus20#.VG7ZqhaD5z8
Pamina
November 23rd, 2014 at 21:18
Thank you! I just read it and I’m using it both in my next blog post and in my final research paper.
Patrick Lo
November 25th, 2014 at 08:05
Dear Pamina,
I am glad that you found my articles useful. Could you tell me how you found my MET Opera article? Was it assigned reading given by your professor OR you just found it via Google by accident?
Please feel free to email me at: Wotan455@hotmail.com – perhaps we could working on some collaborative projects together in future.
One project I have in mind is – Information needs and information retrieval behaviours amongst performing artists & performing arts students….
Patrick Lo
November 25th, 2014 at 08:08
Dear Readers,
I thought you might find this article interesting also:
Saving the Historical Recordings from the SODRE Music Archive: A Rescue Mission Carried Out by the Chopin Society of Hong Kong
http://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/mmkwi7DrQI9yTq7deFPK/full#.VHQ4pxaD5z9
Patrick Lo
November 25th, 2014 at 08:09
Dear Pamina,
I am interested in reading your final research paper once it is done.
Please send over when it is ready.
Jennifer Ward
November 30th, 2014 at 12:28
Dear Pamina,
As the web editor for IAML, the organization which publishes Fontes, I’m delighted to see that an article from its pages has inspired you to think more about music libraries. May I have permission to reprint this blog entry on the IAML website, http://www.iaml.info, with full credit to you and a link back to your website?
Jennifer
webeditor@iaml.info
Pamina
November 30th, 2014 at 23:07
Yes, thank you very much!
Jennifer
December 2nd, 2014 at 07:40
Thanks! I’ll let you know when it’s up.
Jennifer
December 8th, 2014 at 07:54
Pamina, thanks again for permission! It’s published here: http://www.iaml.info/en/node/1219
Patrick Lo
March 22nd, 2016 at 15:57
Dear All:
Pls be informed that my new book: “Conversations with the World’s Leading Orchestra and Opera Librarians” will be available soon – see: https://rowman.com/ISBN/9781442255425/Conversations-with-the-World's-Leading-Orchestra-and-Opera-Librarians