| As Phil Hirsh pointed  out, library cataloging 
is a grafting job of which Luther Burbank would have been ashamed.  To 
the tree of book cataloging it grafts music as almost-books and recordings as 
almost-music.  Dubbings of other recordings are 
almost-records.  In addition the needs of libraries and private 
collectors overlap but, past the part of the circles that overlap, are vastly 
different. Most available databases so far brought to the 
attention of this list are ones that follow library rules.  
 For classical music, I've been using the format set 
out in the World Encyclopedia of Recorded Music for 40 years now, with changes 
(Clough & Cuming, after all, followed the rules for library cataloging in 
1948 with alterations.) The objective of my own databases has been to 
create a screen or page that looks like their entries, but in the order I 
choose.  There's was, in part, based on retail availabilty of the listed 
items, hardly a consideration today. C&C, in turn, built their system on that of the 
Gramophone Shop Encyclopedias designed, I believe, by R.D. Darrell. Classical music is far more complex to catalog than 
popular music, and any system shoud be designed from the most difficult to the 
least, not the other way around.  That's the basic weakness in professional 
library cataloging rules. A system should be designed to put the right 
information in the right place in the right way, whatever that may 
be.  There is very useful information in library cataloging rules and 
some clever solutions to vexing problems- uniform titles for works appearing in 
various editions as Symphony No. 1, First Symphony, Erste Symphonie, 
etc. In the beginning is the title.  There have 
been various attempts at complete works lists by composers- All-Music Guide 
offers some very good ones.  But for those of us wanting access to our 
collections at the item-level, there is not enough detail.  Many Russian 
composers do not have titles worked out for every song they wrote, only their 
greater and lesser hits.  Individual piano pieces need more detail.  
But it's a potentially great resource. Another issue.  How much time are you willing 
to spend cataloging your items?  Would you pay money to avoid having to put 
in  that time, or most of it?   Would you buy cataloging, as with OCLC who sells 
their cataloging to libraries, only in a more consumer-friendly form?  Is 
there a business for someone doing this out thee, perhaps in conjunction with a 
preexisting business who have developed the materials we need and would mostly 
have to alter, expand and shuffle data they already have? ARSC's present efforts at putting together 
everyone's 78 lists suffers from a lack of standards applied uniformly by the 
various contributors.  Ross Laird's "Brunswick Records" is terrible 
when it comes to identifying classical music. If ARSC is to have a hand in cataloging issues 
as they relate to private collectors, perhaps in conduction with one of the 
pre-existing cataloging services, this should be addresses both on this list 
and, perhaps, at the forthcoming conference.    For those who feel that a dollar spent on 
cataloging is a record not bought, this is not for you. Steve Smolian  |