Neha Patil (Editor)

Canadian Association of Music Libraries, Archives, and Documentation Centres

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Abbreviation
  
CAML/ACBM

Type
  
Library Association

Official language
  
English French

Formation
  
1971

Region served
  
Canada

Purpose
  
support musical activities in Canada, including libraries, archives, conservatories, and universities

The Canadian Association of Music Libraries or Association Canadienne des Bibliothèques Musicaux (CAML/ACBM) is a national association which represents music librarians across Canada. Members work in organizations that support musical activities in Canada, including libraries, archives, conservatories, and universities. The organization aims to support all aspects of music librarianship in Canada, including research and scholarship, and to cooperate with other national and international organizations concerned with music.

Contents

CAML is the Canadian branch of the International Association of Music Libraries, Archives and Documentation Centres (IAML).

The association archives are held at Library and Archives Canada.

History

The association was preceded by the Canadian Music Library Association (CMLA), which was a section of the Canadian Library Association founded in 1956. In 1971 the association was reconstituted as the Canadian Association of Music Libraries and in 1992 the name was changed to the Canadian Association of Music Libraries, Archives and Documentation Centres.

Helmut Kallmann was made an honorary member in 1987.

Annual Meetings

The association meets annually, often with the Canadian University Music Society and the Congress Federation for Humanities and Social Sciences.The first IAML meeting to be held in Canada took place in Montreal in 1975.

Cataloguing Committee

The Cataloguing Committee is responsible for giving advice on proposed rule changes as brought forward by the Canadian Committee on Cataloguing, which is a national advisory committee on matters of cataloguing and bibliographic control. The Cataloguing Committee also communicates information to members about developments in the field of music cataloguing.

RILM/CAML Committee

This committee is responsible for abstracting Canadian music publications, which are then added to the RILM (Répertoire International de Littérature Musicale) database. In addition to monographs and doctoral dissertations, the RILM Canada Committee abstracts the following journals:

Primary:

  • Canadian journal of music therapy/Revue canadienne de musicothérapie
  • Intersections: Canadian journal of music
  • Les cahiers de la Société québécoise de recherche en musique
  • Musicological explorations
  • Studies in music from the University of Western Ontario
  • Secondary:

  • CAML review
  • Canadian music educator
  • Canadian winds: The journal of the Canadian Band Association/Vents canadiens : Revue de l'Association canadienne de l'harmonie
  • Opera Canada
  • Recherche en éducation musicale au Québec
  • CAML Review

    CAML began publishing a journal in 1972 entitled Newsletter/Nouvelles. The title was changed to CAML Review/Revue de l'ACBM in 2001. The journal includes articles, reviews and reports about music in Canada, music librarianship and music-related topics. The print version of the CAML Review was discontinued in 2011, although the journal is still published three times a year online. An index to volumes 1 - 38 of the CAML Newsletter and CAML Review was compiled by Kathleen McMorrow.

    Awards

    In 1998, CAML established the Helmut Kallmann Award for excellence in music librarianship and archives work in Canada. The award is named after Dr Helmut Kallmann, chief of the music division at the National Library of Canada from 1970 until 1981. The award is open to those who have made a substantial contribution to the preservation, development and/or research of Canadian music collections. Past recipients include: Jane Ann Pearce Baldwin (2000), Maria Calderisi (2002), and Dr Elaine Keillor (2004).

    References

    Canadian Association of Music Libraries, Archives, and Documentation Centres Wikipedia