AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.

The Virtual Score: Representation, Retrieval, Restoration. (Book Reviews: Diverse Topics).

Notes

| September 01, 2002 | Davison, Stephen | COPYRIGHT 2002 Music Library Association, Inc. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

The Virtual Score: Representation, Retrieval, Restoration. Edited by Walter B. Hewlett and Eleanor Selfridge-Field. (Computing in Musicology, 12.) Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press; Stanford, Calif.: Center for Computer-Assisted Research in the Humanities, 2001. [ix, 291 p. ISBN 0-262-58209-0. ISSN 1057-9478. $28.] Music examples, illustrations, facsimiles, bibliographies, index.

This latest volume in the Computing in Musicology series from the Center for Computer-Assisted Research in the Humanities is a welcome one. As have previous volumes, it documents a variety of applications of computer technology to musical research, but in a way that reflects changes that have taken place in this field. No longer are reports of computer applications in music more promising than productive, written by computer mavens for the chosen few. Rather we have here reports from a variety of authors that document ways in which computer applications have reached far into the mainstream of musical scholarship. The contributors include such well-known scholars as Margaret Bent, Philip Brett, and Alejandro Enrique Planchart. If the likes of these are using computer-assisted techniques in their work, then the field has certainly matured.

The nineteen essays of The Virtual Score examine a variety of techniques for encoding musical scores and the applications that result from this. The book is divided into three sections, reflected in the subtitle: "Representation and Interchange" (ten essays), "Retrieval and Analysis" (three essays), and the "Virtual Restoration of Sources" (six essays). It is this last section in particular that demonstrates how powerful off-the-shelf software--principally Adobe Photoshop--can be used to aid traditional scholarship. The collaborative article by Andrew Wathey, Margaret Bent, and Julia Craig-McFeely on the Digital Image Archive of Medieval Music, for instance, describes how digital editing techniques, such as adjusting black/white levels and color ranges or extracting and combining layers, can be used to restore notation previously considered illegible. Similarly Planchart describes the digital restoration of erased script and stain removal, and Dexter Edge describes techniques for the imaging of watermarks. Ro unding out this section are articles on the collation of divergent printings in the music of William Byrd and digital facsimiles of Alban Berg sketches. The common thread here is that digital techniques can be used in a completely benign way to extract much more information from a digital copy than one can get from the original manuscript with the naked eye.

The opening section of the book, on the representation and interchange of musical information in the form of encoded scores, also displays in striking ways how computer applications in music are becoming more mainstream. The final essay in this section, by Don Anthony, Charles Cronin, and Eleanor Selfridge-Field, surveys the various ways in which musical scores can be provided over the Web, either as images or using various encoding techniques, and includes a useful "copyright primer for electronic editors and users" (p. 137). The thirteen different models for the delivery and display of musical scores described include both Web-based and compact disc-based models, a variety of musical encoding techniques and imaging formats, proprietary as well as open-source formats, and both commercial and noncommercial projects. The availability of so much musical ...

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, journals, and more
The imagery of a myth: computer-assisted research on literature.
Magazine article from: Style Finch, Alison M. December 22, 1995 700+ words
...Doubts have often been expressed about computer-assisted research on literature, but until about seven years ago...in books and periodicals devoted to computer-assisted research on literature (henceforth CARL). They ask questions...
A comment on Alison Finch's article. (comment on article by Alison Finch in...
Magazine article from: Style Milic, Louis T. December 22, 1995 700+ words
...Finch's article ("Computer-Assisted Research on Literature: The Imagery of a...ignore the results of computer-assisted research of literature, that this research...not seem to realize what computer assisted research is and what it does. To begin with...
U. Rhode Island: Speaker addresses news sources at U. Rhode Island.
News wire article from: The America's Intelligence Wire November 18, 2005 700+ words
...about and experiences with computer-assisted research. Ellyn Santiago of The Westerly...retrieve." Parker said computer-assisted research is an indispensable tool. Parker...Parker said. Bass uses computer-assisted research mainly for uncovering controversial...
Dialog on Westlaw revisited. (Dialog databases, Westlaw Account Management and...
Magazine article from: Information Today Griffith, Cary July 1, 1993 700+ words
...Historically, thousands of computer assisted research services have been designed and created...Unfortunately, almost every computer assisted research service has its own search method...how to access and use each computer assisted research service that may, at one time or...
Multimedia and the importance of books: does greater use of nonprint research...
Magazine article from: Information Today Griffith, Cary January 1, 1997 700+ words
...starters, every category of computer-assisted research increased, the most dramatic being...volumes. So while the computer-assisted research statistics increased, so did the...of using a computer. Computer-assisted research usually takes a fraction of the time...
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals judge upholds fees for copyright infringement.
Newspaper article from: Rhode Island Lawyers Weekly May 31, 2004 700+ words
...portion attributed to computer-assisted research, the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of...ruling found. On the computer-assisted research issue, the court said such costs...exact same case." On the computer-assisted research fee issue, Donovan said the court...
CALR training: costs, sources, & content. (Computer Assisted Legal Research)
Magazine article from: Information Today Griffith, Cary June 1, 1990 700+ words
...and practice the art of computer assisted research. But in many law schools, legal...rudimentary, cursory exposure to computer assisted research. The more substantive lessons are...training is an introduction to computer assisted research. After completing Introduction to...
Ibex Announces Year End Results.
Press release article from: Business Wire October 3, 1996 700+ words
...completion of a highly successful tax-assisted research program. This program has contributed...technology developed under the tax-assisted research program. All of these investment...successfully completed the tax-assisted research program. In addition, our key product...
CORRECTION to IBEX Technologies release issued yesterday.(Correction Notice)
Press release article from: Business Wire October 4, 1996 700+ words
...completion of a highly successful tax-assisted research program. This program has contributed...technology developed under the tax-assisted research program. All of these investment...successfully completed the tax-assisted research program. In addition, our key product...
CD-ROMs gaining wider acceptance among law librarians. (Southern California...
Magazine article from: Information Today Griffith, Cary April 1, 1993 700+ words
...Lexis, Westlaw and other computer assisted research services? Of CD-ROM users, how...Lexis, Westlaw, or other computer assisted research services? The answer to this question...with, and use of online computer assisted research. The responses are probably what...
For more facts and information, see all results

Source: HighBeam Research, The Virtual Score: Representation, Retrieval, Restoration. (Book...

©2009 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
About us | FAQs | Contact us | Privacy policy | Terms and conditions
Other Gale sites: Encyclopedia.com | HighBeam Research | Acquire Content | Books & Authors | Goliath | MovieRetriever | Smart QandA