Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians

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Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians is a major reference work in the field of music, originally compiled by Theodore Baker, PhD, and published in 1900 by G. Schirmer, Inc. The ninth edition, the most recent edition, was published in 2001.

Edition history

Leading up to the initial publication of Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians, Baker had compiled and edited three editions of A Dictionary of Musical Terms — published 1895, 1896, and 1897, respectively, by G. Schirmer, Inc.[1]

First edition

The first edition, published in 1900, has 647 pages

Valerian Gribayédoff
).

Fourth edition

The fourth edition, published in 1940, has 1,234 pages.

Latin-American musicians were more fully represented in this issue than in any English work of the kind in its day.[2]

Fifth edition

The fifth edition was rewritten by new editor Nicolas Slonimsky, who would remain editor for several decades (up to the eighth edition in 1992) and have a considerable influence on the style and content of the dictionary. In preparing the fifth edition, Slonimsky expanded the size of the work to 1,855 pages and undertook a thorough review of the existing entries, expending considerable effort verifying and correcting biographical details such as birth and death dates by reference to archival sources.[3]

Eighth edition

The eighth edition of 1992 revised 1,300 entries and added 1,100 new ones, coming to 2,115 pages, with an emphasis on expanding coverage of female and Asian musicians, multimedia composers, performance artists, and ethnomusicologists. The seventh and eighth editions were pre-titled The Concise Edition.

Ninth edition

The ninth edition of 2001, billed the "Centennial Edition", was the first not to be a single-volume work, taking up six volumes, partly due to expanded coverage and partly due to somewhat more generous formatting to improve readability. The ninth edition included a focus on increasing coverage of popular music and jazz.[4]

History of its publishers

G. Schirmer, Inc., publisher of Baker's since the first edition, was sold to Macmillan Inc. in 1969.[5]

Macmillan sold G. Schirmer, except for its reference holdings, to

Cengage Learning
.

Editions

Edited by Theodore Baker (1851–1934)

  • First edition (1900);
Supplement (1905);

Edited by Theodore Baker and Alfred Remy (1870–1927)

Edited by Nicolas Slonimsky (1894–1995)

Second printing (revised & enlarged) (1940);
Third printing (revised & enlarged) (1949);
Supplement (1965);
Supplement (1971);
Abridged (1988);

Edited by Laura Diane Kuhn, PhD (born 1953)

Vol. 1: Aalt–Cone;
Vol. 2: Conf–Gysi;
Vol. 3: Haar–Levi;
Vol. 4: Levy–Pisa;
Vol. 5: Pisc–Stra;
Vol. 6: Stre–Zyli; Indexes (genre, nationality, women);
pdf version;

Other editions

Slonimsky (ed.); Richard Kostelanetz (ed.); Michael Stutzman (assistant ed.)
  • Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Twentieth-Century Classical Musicians (1997),

Other works of similar nature

Earlier works
1844: Complete Encyclopedia of Music, Elementary, Technical, Historical, Biographical, Vocal, and Instrumental, by
OCLC 4659526
1879:
Later, contemporaneous American works
1939: International Cyclopedia of Music and Musicians, Oscar Lee Thompson (1887–1945) (ed.),

References

  1. ^ A Dictionary of Musical Terms, Theodore Baker (compiler & editor), G. Schirmer, Inc.
        1st ed. (1895);
    LCCN 06-32762

        2nd ed. (1896);

        
    3rd ed. (1897);
        
    5th ed. (1901);
    OCLC 10973980
  2. ^ .
  3. ^ Kozinn, Allan (December 27, 1995). "Nicolas Slonimsky, Author of Widely Used Reference Works on Music,Dies at 101". The New York Times. p. 6.
  4. JSTOR 962264
    .
  5. ^ "G. Schirmer is Sold," The New York Times, May 16, 1986

Works cited