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Music/Dance Library - Support the Library

The generosity of our friends plays a vital role in supporting our exciting new digital technologies (including streaming audio and video course reserves) and the purchase of essential books, scores, periodicals, and recordings. A Music/Dance Library Endowment Fund was established in 2006 to help the Library maintain its position as one of the largest and finest collections of its kind. To learn how you can help, phone us at 614-688-0163.

To make an immediate gift by credit card, click here to use our secure server.

OSU faculty/staff may contribute through the annual Campus Campaign — designate fund 480173.

The Ohio State University Music/Dance Library supports the teaching, research, and performance areas of the School of Music and the Department of Dance. The Library's collections and facilities are open to all OSU students, faculty, and staff, and the community at large.

Gifts to the library are considered charitable donations and are tax deductible, though tax laws change and you should consult your own advisors. Gifts may take the form of bequests made through a will, deferred gifts that provide you with a life income and then benefit the Music/Dance Library, gifts of cash, marketable securities, life insurance, real property, or retirement plan assets. Bequests provide a way for you to memorialize your dedication to the Music/Dance Library and its mission.


The Library's collections include approximately 80,000 disc and tape recordings, 130,000 books and scores, 12,000 serials, 5,600 microfilms, and a large collection of DVD and VHS videos. In addition, the Library houses the former WOSU-FM collection of approximately 22,500 vinyl LPs of classical, jazz, and operatic works, and the American Broadcasting Company collection of approximately 16,000 pieces of popular sheet music from the early 20th century to the 1950s. The Library also contains a Nordic Music Archive of contemporary Scandinavian scores and recordings. It receives every year from several music publishers in the five Nordic countries gifts of scores, books, and recordings which the Library in turn catalogs and uploads to the OCLC worldwide database. The Nordic Music Archive comprises approximately 2,300 scores and 2,000 recordings.

The general collections include biographies, histories, theoretical and reference works about music and dance, periodical and serial sets, music theses and dissertations, recital recordings, and a large variety of materials on music and dance topics from ancient times to the present. The score collections contain not only scholarly editions of the complete works of all the major composers but also a wide range of practical editions of vocal and instrumental music. Special research materials include microforms of music manuscripts and early prints, and music dissertations from other universities in the United States and abroad. The Library owns a set of the Deutsches Musikgeschichtliches Archiv microfilms that reproduce thousands of documents in Renaissance and early Baroque music found chiefly in German libraries. And the Library owns more than five hundred music dictionaries dating from 1495 to the present.

Online specialized databases include Music Index, RILM, RIPM, International Index to Music Periodicals, International Index to Performing Arts, and Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, together with hundreds of general-interest databases and online journals, many of them full-text. Also available are streaming audio resources for class reserves, DRAM (streaming audio, complete liner notes and essays from New World Records, Composers Recordings, Inc. and other labels), and the classical and jazz Naxos Music Libraries. Naxos offers more than 140,000 tracks from some 9,000 CDs and 7,000 composers and from other labels than Naxos's own.

The Library is proudly serving as the central editorial office for an exciting music iconography database project. The Répertoire International d'Iconographie Musicale RIdIM is a worldwide effort to identify and catalog art works that feature musical images such as instruments, performers, composers, and events. Library staff involved in the project include librarians Alan Green (Project Coordinator) and Sean Ferguson (Editor-in-Chief), and cataloger Gretchen Atkinson. In addition, numerous School of Music graduate students have contributed their time and skills, especially Bria Parker, Ursula Crosslin, and Alison Furlong. The RIdIM database will eventually be available for free searching on the Web. For information, contact Sean Ferguson at 614-292-2319 or ferguson.36@osu.edu.

Music has been an integral part of The Ohio State University from its earliest years. The Men's Glee Club dates from 1873, and the University Band from 1879. Music courses were first offered in 1908, and dance courses in 1923. The Music Library was organized in 1946, and moved to Sullivant Hall in 1975.

Materials for the music and dance collections are purchased primarily through general funds from OSU Libraries. The Music/Dance Library receives additional funding from the Friends of the Libraries.

Updated 15 September 2009

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