INTRODUCTIONRÉPERTOIRE INTERNATIONAL DE LA PRESSE MUSICALE (RIPM) published under the auspices of International Musicological Society International Association of Music Librairies, Archives and Documentation Centres UNESCOs International Council for Philosophy and Humanitic Studies The Répertoire international de la presse musicale (RIPM) is one of four international cooperative bibliographic undertakings in music, alongside Le Répertoire international des sources musicales (RISM), Le Répertoire international de littérature musicale (RILM), and Le Répertoire international d'iconographie musicale (RIdIM). "These are, without doubt, the most important current bibliographic documentation projects in the field of music research."1 Of the four "Rs" RIPM alone focuses on nineteenth-century music and musical life. The development of musical romanticism coincided with the parallel development of musical journalism and the creation of a very large number of periodicals dealing entirely or in part with musical activities. Specialized music journalsalone numbering more than 2,000 in the nineteenth centuryfeuilletons in daily newspapers, articles in literary periodicals, in theatrical journals and in magazines de mode, as well as engravings and lithographs in the illustrated press constitute a remarkable documentary resource of monumental proportions that is of primary and unquestionable importance to the music historian. Yet in spite of the information contained therein, two problems have prevented this material from being systematically examined: (1) the limited number of libraries possessing the journals, and (2) the difficulty encountered when one attempts to locate specific information within an available source. Clearly, gaining bibliographical control and consequently access to this exceptional source of information is of profound importance to the development of nineteenth-century studies in musicologya fact, moreover, which has long been recognized.2The Répertoire international de la presse musicale (RIPM)which was created specifically to resolve the problems surrounding this scholarly impasseis one of the most productive editorial undertakings in the history of musicology. Functioning under the auspices of the International Musicological Society, the International Association of Music Libraries, Archives and Documentation Centres, and UNESCO's International Council for Philosophy and Humanistic Studies, an international network of institutions and scholars is in the process of producing approximately 200 volumes over a twenty-year period (1988-2008). These three-part publicationswhich consist of highly annotated calendars, extensive keyword-in-context/author indexes and introductory studiesoffer access for the first time to a significant portion of this monumental documentary resource. One-hundred fifty volumes have already appeared; and many others are in preparation. Published comments concerning this immense editorial undertaking and reviews of the published volumes have all been extremely favorable; two citations sum up the critical reaction to RIPM: "a tool which will prove of the greatest value to all working on music from the late-eighteenth to the early-twentieth centuries." (Peter Ward Jones, Fontes Artis Musicae, Journal of the International Association of Music Libraries XXXVI/4,1989)]; "...an editorial initiative of huge mass which we will read and re-read as long as historical musicology exists..."[ (Lorenzo Bianconi, Il Giornale della Musica, September 1990)]. An international board of distinguished scholars, librarians and archivists has selected sixty-five primarily nineteenth-century music journalspublished in Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Great Britain, Germany, Hungary, Italy, The Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Spain, Sweden and the United Statesfor priority treatment by RIPM. Of this selection a reviewer wrote: "the planned coverage is excellent...the thought and care that the editorial board took in the selection of lesser known items that often illuminate years of political and social crisis and musical change make the result invaluable." 3RIPM benefits from the collaboration of scholars and institutions in some fifteen countries; a principal editorial headquarters in the United States, a collaborating center in Italy (Centro internazionale di ricerca sui periodici musicali, Parma-Colorno); and active research teams throughout Europe. At the same time unique computer programs and laser printing techniques have been developed specifically for RIPM to allow scholars to prepare volumes through a linkage of traditional editorial practices and sophisticated computer technology. __________________________________ |
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