A Brief History of the Stanford University Music Library
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Edward Colby in 1977
Photo: Chuck Painter / Stanford News Service
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Edward
Colby (1912-2006) was hired as Stanford's first Music Librarian
in 1949 after he came to the attention of Professors W. Loran Crosten,
Chair
of
the Music Department, and Leonard G. Ratner. When Colby arrived,
the Music Department was located in the Knoll which now houses
the Center for Computer-Assisted Research in Music and Acoustics
(CCRMA),
and which had first served as the residence of Stanford President
Ray Lyman Wilbur and his family from 1918-1943. The collection consisted
of approximately 800 books and scores and some 78-rpm recordings
which were stored in two small rooms on the third floor. In 1948
Nancy Bonnin, wife of a scholar in Germanic Studies had been appointed
to supervise the small collection that had been pulled from the
main library along with some reference sources from the Memorial
Library of Music. Colby was the primary architect of the Music Library's
collections, having seen its expansion through its first 28 years.
After retiring in 1977, Colby was succeeded by Jerry Persons in
1978. By this time the library had moved to the second floor of
the Knoll and its collection included ca. 44,000 books and scores
and 11,000 recordings. Under Persons' leadership extremely overcrowded
conditions were relieved by the addition of a temporary building
in the Knoll courtyard to house the stacks and provide study space.
The former ballroom became the reference room and the pantry, the
head librarian's office. While the building had lots of nice features
including French doors that opened onto balconies, it also had
some oddities. Two staff members shared a funny-shaped office
that had
first functioned as a gun closet. The staff took care of a stray
orange cat that had many aliases, (e.g. Ignaz, Perfect Love) but
Stinky was the one that stuck. He craftily knew all the ways to
get in and out of the building, including a book drop. On a wet
day, you could spot him huddled under one of the ventilation hoods
on the roof.
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| "Stinky" in the Knoll, 1982 |
Services and staffing were increased during Persons' tenure, including
the addition of a second professional position, Assistant Music
Librarian. Mimi Tashiro was appointed to that position in 1982.
Music Library staff became responsible for ordering and processing
scores, recordings, and microform using the Research Libraries Group
Information Network (i.e. RLIN), which had previously been done
by staff in the main library. A close relationship was formed with
other music libraries, most notably U.C. Berkeley and members of
the Research Libraries Group (RLG), for cooperative purchases and
other collection-related projects, including direct interlibrary
borrowing and lending. Stanford joined with several large music
libraries (Berkeley, Eastman, Harvard, Illinois, Indiana, Yale)
to form the Associated Music Libraries Group (AMLG). Together they
sought grant support to convert their card catalogs into machine-readable
form. Perhaps Persons' greatest contribution was his planning of
the new library in the Braun Music Center. The library moved over
the winter break in 1983 and opened for Winter Quarter in January
1984, with the bulk of the collection remaining at the Knoll while
the stacks were completed. Persons took leave from the Music Library
to assume the position of Acting Head of the Stanford University
Libraries Systems Office later that year and chose to remain in
that position permanently. He is currently the Chief Information
Architect for the University Libraries.
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| Braun Music Center |
From 1984-1986, Elisabeth Rebman, formerly Head of the Music Cataloging
Unit, served as Acting Head and in 1986, Kären Nagy was appointed
Music Librarian & Bibliographer. At the time of her arrival,
the library's collection numbered some 66,000 books and scores,
and 26,000 recordings. During Nagy's tenure the position of Operations
Manager was created and the former Music Cataloging Unit, which
was part of the Catalog Department, became administratively part
of the Music Library and was renamed Music Technical Services, encompassing
both cataloging and acquisitions. The AMLG consortium continued
to receive grant funding for conversion of their catalogs. The library
survived the 1989 Loma Prieta Earthquake virtually unscathed except
for fallen card catalogs with a few broken drawers, and books, scores
and other materials which had scattered off their shelves. In 1990
Nagy moved to the main library to serve as the Acting Director of
Collections and Public Services and was later appointed to that
position permanently. She then became Deputy Director of the University
Libraries and left the libraries to serve as Executive Dean of the
School of Humanities & Sciences.
With Nagy's departure, the administrative structure of the Music
Library was altered. Barbara Sawka, Curator of the Archive of Recorded
Sound, was named Acting, and later permanent Head of the Music Library
and Archive. As part of this change Mimi Tashiro was promoted to
Music Bibliographer in 1992 with responsibility for the collections
in the Music Library. In 2001 Sawka chose to retire and in 2003,
Jerry McBride began his appointment as Head of the Music Library
and Archive of Recorded Sound. At the time of his arrival, the library
contained more than 112,000 books and scores and 32,000 sound recordings.
Over the years, the Music Cataloging Unit, now Music Technical
Services, has been served by many outstanding librarians. Among
them are Mia Rode, Garrett Bowles, Peggy Meyers, Elisabeth Rebman,
Marlene Wong, Mimi Tashiro, Jeffrey Earnest, Kevin Freeman, Philip
Schreur, Nancy Lorimer, and Raymond Heigemeir.
The library's paraprofessional staff has included several music
doctoral students who have gone on to careers in librarianship,
including Lynne Toribara, Kent Underwood, Philip Schreur, and Eunice
Schroeder. Rebecca Lasher Wesley, who worked as a library assistant,
would leave and later return to Stanford as Head of its Math and
Computer Science Library. Others who have worked in the Music Library
and made valuable contributions
include
Erna
Wilson,
Ida
Kattenberg,
Jean
Kan, Marianne Bahmann, Katherine Bain, Lissy Bland, Gina Balestracci,
Diane Westfall, Geoffrey Skinner, C. Winton Reynolds, Sheridan
Schroeter, Keith Bisaillon, Ruth Escher, Stephen Escher, Anne
Piascik, Riva
Bacon, Richard Powers, Mie Araki, Liam Harty, and Frank Ferko.
Stanford graduates in music who went on to become music librarians
include Gordon Rowley, George Hill and Tom Moore.
Last modified:
November 7, 2006
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