Shelflisting and cuttering in Class M

Music Cataloging at Yale Call numbers

Filing "M" (Music) shelflist cards | Correspondence on MLA-L concerning shelflisting/cuttering


Filing 'M' (Music) Shelflist Cards
prepared by Renee McBride
Used by permission of Renee McBride, September 21, 2000

As music cataloger at the University of Oklahoma in 1992, I prepared the following guide to filing M shelflist cards at the request of a staff member who supervised the student filers. Some of the information may be peculiar to the University of Oklahoma shelflist, but provides a model for other libraries. I would like to thank the late Virginia Gifford for providing me with the Library of Congress' filing order in M, and Donna Arnold and Judy Weidow for reading the document and offering suggestions.

I. Definitions of terms | II. Thematic index numbering conflicts | Filing order

I. Definitions of terms

1) Cutter number: An alphanumeric symbol that represents a name, title, etc.

M
23
.B414
Beethoven, Ludwig van, 1770-1827.
[Sonatas, piano]
(represents "Beethoven")

The purpose of cutter numbers is to alphabetize by composer, author, etc.

2) Double cutter numbers: 2 alphanumeric symbols that represent names, titles, etc.

M
25
.F53
P5
Fiocco, Joseph Hector, 1703-1741.
[Pieces de clavecin. Selections]
(represents "Fiocco")
(represents "Pieces de clavecin")

3) Opus number: A number assigned to a musical composition, indicating the order of composition.

M
23
.B414
op.13
Beethoven, Ludwig van, 1770-1827.
[Sonatas, piano, no. 8, op. 13, C minor]
(represents "Beethoven")
(opus number)

4) Serial number: Enumeration of a musical composition, indicating the order of composition and/or publication.

M
23
.A88
no.4
Asturias, Rodrigo.
[Sonatas, piano, no. 4]
(represents "Asturias")
(serial number)

5) Thematic index: A list of a composer's works with the theme given for each composition, or for each section of large compositions. Thematic index number: A unique number assigned by the compiler of a thematic index to each composition in the index.

M
111
.B3
BWV1053
Bach, Johann Sebastian, 1685-1750.
[Concertos, harpsichord, string orchestra, BWV 1053, E major; arranged]
(represents "Bach")
(thematic index number)

II. Thematic index numbering conflicts

For a list of work numbers (other than or in addition to opus numbers) for composers, see Work numbers for composers

Bach, Carl Phillip Emanuel
Bach, Johann Sebastian
Beethoven, Ludwig van
Handel, George Frideric
Haydn, Joseph
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus
Vivaldi, Antonio
H and W
BWV and S
K and WoO
B and HWV
H and M
K and K. Anh.
F, RV and R

III. Filing order

1. Single cutter no. M
23
.B414
2. Single cutter no. + date of composition(1982) The date of composition is always enclosed in parentheses, in order to avoid confusion with the publication date. M
322
.L63
(1982)
3. Cutter no. + opus no. M
23
.B414
op.27
4. Cutter no. + opus no. + serial no. M
23
.B414
op.27
no.1
5. Cutter no. + opus no. + 2nd cutter no. M
23
.B414
op.27
B7
6. Cutter no. + opus no. + serial no. + 2nd cutter no. M
23
.B414
op.27
no.1
B7
7. Cutter no. + thematic index no. M
1111
.B3
BWV1053
8. Cutter no. + thematic index no. + 2nd cutter no. M
1111
.B3
BWV1053
K4
9. Cutter no. + serial no. M
23
.A88
no.4
10. Cutter no. + key of composition M
1010
.R22
Gmaj.
11. Double cutter no. M
25
.F53
P5
12. Triple cutter no. M
1520
.S915
H4
K3

Most call numbers will contain the date of publication as the last element of the call number. When call numbers are identical except for the date of publication, file as follows:

1.Call no. without date M
23
.B414
B95
2. Call no. + date M
23
.B414
B95
1894
M
23
.B414
B95
1923

Continue filing in chronological order.


Correspondence on MLA-L concerning shelflisting/cuttering

Question:

What do my fellow music catalogers prefer to use in a call number: no. or op. (catalog) number? Is there a rule anywhere or is the choice purely opinion? For example: Beethoven's Concerto for piano and orchestra in C minor. Would you use no. 3 or op. 37? In a 'perfect' Music Library, the same piece (just different publisher) would be classed together on the shelf by whatever means possible. Alas, it is not a perfect world and I have the above title classed under both no. 3 AND op. 37.

Response:

° The LC Subject cataloging manual, Shelflisting (2nd ed.), G 800 (Music materials) states that instrumental music should be shelflisted by adding the opus or thematic index number whenever they appear in the uniform title. If these numbers are not given, THEN a serial number is used. Hence, for the Beethoven Piano concerto no. 3, op. 37 is used. Of course no one is (theoretically) obligated to use LC's procedure here, but for practical purposes most (?) libraries do. I would strongly urge the use of the opus number.

° I want to share with the list a response I received from June Gifford to my inquiry about filing M shelflist cards. She asked one of LC's shelflisters what their order was, and the response was as follows:

Filing order in M
The order in which cards would be filed in a card catalog
Order of cuttering in M
The order of preference for adding elements for composer and work to a class number to form a call number
See also Cutter Numbers for Main Entry and Additional Elements for Title
Single cutter number
Single cutter number plus date composed
Cutter number plus opus number
Cutter number plus thematic catalog number
Cutter number plus serial number
Cutter number plus key
Double cutter
Opus number
Thematic catalog number
Serial number
Key
Date composed in parentheses
Double cutter by title
Single cutter

° I generally follow LC in this regard. A source for LC's practice -- the SCM: Shelflisting text, part G800 -- describes the classification and shelflisting of music materials. A line which refers to the topic you bring up reads: "Add the opus number or thematic index number [BWV, etc.] whenever they appear in the uniform title" (G800, page 1). A later section has the following: "If the opus number or thematic index number is not given, and the class number is specifically for the individual title or uniform title of the work, add one of the following elements, in the following order of preference: serial number, key..." (G800, page 2).

Following this, I use an explicit serial number (i.e. no. 2, not one of those instances where you hide it in a cutter, such as H34*2*) only if it appears in the uniform title without an opus or thematic index number. In cases when the uniform title has both, I choose the opus; using both would be redundant I feel.

° According to the MLA Technical Report No. 9, Shelflisting Music, by Richard Smiraglia, the order of preference is:

1. Opus or thematic index number (with LC preferring thematic index no. when there's a conflict)
2. Serial number, when the uniform title = class number.
3. Key.
4. Date of composition.
5. Work no. for title (for works without 1-4, works whose titles don't class, and all dramatic works)