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An Introduction to Uniform Titles for Music
Additions to Uniform Titles | Collective Uniform Titles What if you don't know the uniform title? | More information
Why uniform titles?A basic understanding of uniform titles for music is helpful when searching CLICnet for scores and sound recordings. Because musical works are issued in such a variety of languages, formats, transcriptions, arrangements, etc., librarians have devised a way of grouping different "incarnations" of a work under standardized titles. For example, a title page of a score for Mozart's opera, The Marriage of Figaro, may read "The Marriage of Figaro," "Le Nozze di Figaro," "Les noces de Figaro," or even "Die Hochzeit des Figaro." Librarians have chosen the original title, "Nozze di Figaro," as the uniform title. In CLICnet, the uniform title appears after "Unif title:"
If you understand how uniform titles work, your searches of CLICnet are likely to be more thorough. Uniform titles may be distinctive, generic, or collective. Various additional elements may be appended to uniform titles.
Distinctive TitlesUniform titles for distinctive titles are usually the composer's original title in the original language in which he or she created it. Initial articles are omitted. Two examples:
Generic TitlesUniform titles for generic titles may have up to four distinct elements,
in this order:
Additions to Uniform TitlesUniform titles may qualified in various ways. Here are some examples.
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| This uniform title: | Indicates the following: |
| Works. | A composer's complete works |
| Chamber music. | A composer's complete chamber music |
| Chamber music. Selections. | Some of a composer's chamber music, including various types of chamber music. |
| Piano music. | A composer's complete piano music |
| Sonatas. Selections. | Some of a composer's sonatas. |
Keyword search in CLICnet. Try a few Keyword searches for the title as you know it. Then look at the titles and uniform titles on the entries you retrieve. After your preliminary search, try additional Keyword searches using words from the uniform title.
Reference Books. If your trial searches in CLICnet do not lead you to a uniform title, try consulting the following:
For librarians:
Smiraglia, Richard. Music Cataloging. Libraries Unlimited, 1989.
Note regarding MARC fields. In the MARC record, uniform titles show up in the 240 field (uniform titles) and in 700, subfield t, in the added entries. The other titles you see, including those in 245 (title proper), 505 (formatted contents), and 740 (analytical title) are not authority-controlled.