Course Number: MU271
Subject: Music
Research tips
- use a variety of sources: articles should be from more than one journal or essay collection
- start early - we can get you material from other libraries
- know how to combine keywords:
- Better searching using AND, OR, NOT (video tutorial: 4:04)
Grove Music Online
- Access is incorporated through Oxford Music Online
- Remember to consult the "Bibliography" at the end of the article
Background sources
Books
- Search Omni to identify books at Laurier
- limit to "Books and eBooks"
- Requesting item
- print, from Laurier and other Omni libraries
- Mail on Demand (only within Canada)
- Scan on Demand
- Learn about call numbers for locating books and the Waterloo campus floor plans
- Search through our ebook collections - these let you search across the full text
Scholarly Articles
- Search Omni to identify books at Laurier
- limit to "Articles"
- limit to results from Peer-Reviewed Journals
Beyond the articles you might find using Omni, the following databases provide more direct access to scholarly articles.
- RILM abstracts of Music Literature
- international coverage of music publications. Covers articles, books, etc. Limit to peer reviewed, and perhaps English
- Music Periodicals Database
- articles from popular music publications. Limit to scholarly (lots of magazine content). Exclude reviews.
For more detailed searching, and/or for more obscure topics, try searching across the full text through these databases:
- JSTOR
- full text collection of ejournals, searchable across all the full text; you can also limit to music journals
- Periodicals Archive Online
- another full text collection of ejournals, searchable across all the full text; you can also limit to music journals
Think outside the box, you may find journal literature in other databases. E.g,
- ATLA Religion Database
- Church music, etc.
- Historical Abstracts
- musical issues related to historical and political events
Scores
Go to Scores to find scores in print and online.
Audio
- Listen Online (library subscriptions such as Naxos)
- The Great 78 Project
- over 3 million recordings of digitized 78rpm records, covering 1898-1950s
Video
The Library subscribes to a number of streaming video services that may contain helpful resources for your term paper
- Medici.tv
- recorded concerts, live performances, and documentaries
- Films on demand
- documentataries, search for specific names or events. Some examples include:
Citing your sources
- Citing Music: Chicago Style (University of Manitoba)
- includes examples for Naxos and YouTube
- Chicago Manual of Style, 17th edition, complete manual