I agree, Monica.  As a child I was awed and thrilled to discover libraries.  
The love for them - and the respect for those who staff them - has not 
diminished, but rather deepened, over the years.
Ned
On Nov 11, 2010, at 7:02 AM, Monica Hall wrote:

> As a retired librarian it seems to me that everyone will be better off if
> you have your way except the poor old libraries and librarians who need
> money to keep their heads above water.   Without us there wouldn't be any
> books available or a decent place to read them.   Why should people make
> money out of doing an edition or even publishing a facsimile but the not the
> people and organizations who
> have made sure that these things are preserved in the first place?
> 
> In any case even a facsimile is not a substitute for seeing the real thing.
> 
> Monica
> 
> 
> ----- Original Message ----- From: "David Tayler" <[email protected]>
> To: "lute-cs.dartmouth.edu" <[email protected]>
> Sent: Wednesday, November 10, 2010 9:33 PM
> Subject: [LUTE] Re: More digital facsimiles from the (public) libraries?
> 
> 
>> Although I understand all of the issues, including compensating ppl
>> for their time, charging money for facsimiles is basically evil, and
>> in the long run everyone will be better served by having more music
>> available--more concerts, more audience, more work.
>> What all libraries should do is just put it all online, and then if
>> someone wants to make an edition and sell it, fine. Just make a PDF,
>> and upload it, and I guarantee that everyone will benefit.
>> This also prevents players from owning a repertory by limiting access.
>> 
>> If scholars want to sell the commentary as a separate book, that is
>> also fine, and continues an established tradition.
>> dt
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> At 12:32 PM 11/10/2010, you wrote:
>>>   Still something that I don't get:
>>> 
>>>   why are some public (public) libraries slowly making all their MS
>>>   available as a digital download - and I'm thinking about the the
>>>   Bayerisch Staatsbibliothek here in Munich, between others -, while
>>>   there are other PUBLIC libraries (hello, British Library ...) - that
>>>   still do not even seem to envisage that ...
>>> 
>>>   Shall we (as single members of the list) put some pressure on our
>>> local
>>>   libraries? Send an email to the curators of their music departments  -
>>>   maybe as rightful, registered members of the library, as I guess some
>>>   of us are - and ask about it?
>>>   (Of course, this doesn't want to diminuish at all the value of such
>>>   pubblication as the Dd.2.11 by the Lute Society. The scholarship part
>>>   is something you dont get in a digital facsimile ...)
>>>   Your opinion, listers?
>>>   Matteo
>>>   On 10 November 2010 20:19, Denys Stephens
>>>   <[1][email protected]> wrote:
>>>   [...]
>>> 
>>>      It's also worth noting that whilst some
>>>     of
>>>     the world's libraries are making digital copies of their musical
>>>     sources
>>>     available, there is currently no expectation that this, or indeed
>>>     any of the
>>>     Cambridge University Library manuscripts will become available as
>>>     free
>>>     electronic downloads.
>>>     Denys
>>> 
>>>   --
>>> 
>>> References
>>> 
>>>   1. mailto:[email protected]
>>> 
>>> 
>>> To get on or off this list see list information at
>>> http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
>> 
>> 
> 
> 



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