Oesterle Library News

Archive for the ‘Contemporary World Music’ Category

Jazz Music Library

Sunday, May 3rd, 2009

On April 28th 2009, Jazz Music Library was updated with 1,955 albums.  This brings the database to 18,922 tracks including artists from the past to musicians performing and recording today. This comprehensive collection of online jazz music includes thousands of artists, ensembles, albums, and genres and can be accessed through Music Online.

The online collection can be browsed by album titles, recording date, song titles, and more. Registered users can also create playlists containing whole videos, tracks, segments, etc.  Playlists can be used as lists of personal favorites, class viewing/listening assignments, or as a teaching resource for in-class use.

New Music Resource: Music Online

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

Music Online is the new interface for three music databases that provide access to streaming audio, video, reference information and musical scores.  Via Music Online you can search the contents of the American Song, Classical Music Library, and Contemporary World Music databases all at the same time.

Music Online offers many searching options. Browse by musical genre, instrument, cultural group, and more.  Or type in searches for composer, classical work title, author, publisher, and limit your search by date, genre, language, or many other options.

Register as a user on the site and you can create personalized playlists containing whole videos, tracks, segments (clips) and/or other items in the database. Playlists can be annotated, edited, copied, shared, and all playlists contain their own unique static URL. To try out Music Online, visit Oesterle Library’s Music Resources page.

Streaming Music from the Library

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

Want to hear a Bollywood movie tune, a Delta blues song from the twenties, a Beethoven symphony, a classic American protest song, or the harmonies of an a capella singing group from Ghana? With the addition of five new music databases from Alexander Street Press, Oesterle Library now offers more than 50,000 tracks of music from around the world in streaming audio.

The five new databases–African American Song; American Song; Classical Music Library; Contemporary World Music; and Smithsonian Global Sound–each include thousands of recordings of great music, ranging from medieval to modern. The databases include the original recordings of American legends like Leadbelly and Woody Guthrie, as well as folk and popular songs recorded for famous labels like Folkways. Classical compositions are often represented by several different high-quality recordings of performances by first-rate musicians and conductors. Serious students of music, music history, and ethnomusicology will find the rich and expansive content of these databases to be indispensable. And everyone else is sure to find music they’ll enjoy listening to here–whether it be Tejano, Afropop, Celtic, gospel, ragtime, raga, reggae, jazz, or Baroque.

All of the recordings in the Alexander Street Press databases are available to current NCC students, faculty, and staff in streaming audio. Each database also includes liner notes, CD cover art, and information about the featured artists, composers, albums, recordings, and musical styles. All can be accessed via the “Choose a Database” pulldown menu on the library homepage; on the Articles page; or on the Research by Subject page for Music.

The databases:

African American Song includes more than 16,000 African-American songs; genres include blues, jazz, gospel, ragtime, and more.

American Song includes more than 14,000 American songs; genres include folk, rock, jazz, zydeco, bluegrass, and more.

Classical Music Library includes more than 50,000 classical music recordings of all styles and time periods, as well as substantial reference material on the history of Western music.

Contemporary World Music includes more than 9,000 songs from contemporary artists from around the globe; genres include reggae, Tejano, Afropop, Bollywood, flamenco and more.

Smithsonian Global Sound includes tens of thousands of folk, traditional, classical, and popular music recordings. Here you’ll find the entire published catalog of the Smithsonian Folkways label–the single most important collection of recordings of classic American folk music, and also the best source for field recordings of traditional music from around the globe.