Taking a look at the title page on google books I would say that the source field in the header should read:
source = "Price & Reynolds, 41, Berners Street W, London" This, along with the publication date, provide a clear statement of what you used as a base for this transcription. You may want to use the phrase, "The Music to J. M. Barrieās Successful ..." as a subtitle, depending on how busy you want the top of the page to look. Regarding a new style called "incidental": as you observed it is not a style so much as it is an explanation for its purpose or, possibly, its brevity. I think "study" or "overture" would fall into the same category. In this collection, there is a music for "The Pirates Depart" which would be a fair result when searching for a march so I'm leaning towards selecting from existing styles. This is a good place for that discussion but you could also add it as an issue in github if you feel strongly about it. -glen On Tue, Dec 23, 2014 at 9:13 PM, Joel C. Salomon <joelcsalo...@gmail.com> wrote: > On 12/23/2014 11:31 PM, Edward Cannon wrote: > >> On Dec 23, 2014, at 7:53 PM, Joel C. Salomon <joelcsalo...@gmail.com> > wrote: > >> Earlier this evening, I wrote: > >>> I've just come across the incidental music to the original stage > >>> production of Peter Pan; or, The Boy who wouldn't Grow Up. Both Google > >>> Books (http://books.google.com/books?id=J-wQAAAAYAAJ) and the Internet > >>> Archive (https://archive.org/details/musictojmbarrie00barrgoog) seem > to > >>> think this music, published in 1905, is in the public domain. > <snip> > >> According to <http://worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no2002041637/>, Crook > >> lived from 1852--1922; his music is safely in the public domain. > > > > Does anyone know if there are specific legal restrictions on this music > > in the UK? As I recall Peter Pan is under perpetual copyright there-I > > wonder if that extends to this music as well, or just the text of the > > play. > > The text of the law, quoted at > <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_and_Wendy#United_Kingdom>, implies > it would not apply to the music detached from a performance of the story. > > But there's no need to play lawyer about this: J. M. Barrie gifted the > copyright to Peter Pan to the GOSH, but the copyright to the music was > never his to give away. The copyright page on the PDF reads, > "COPYRIGHT, MCMV FOR ALL COUNTRIES BY PRICE & REYNOLDS.", Price & > Reynolds being the publishers of the song book; and what rights the > publishers didn't own would have been Crook's -- or possibly the Duke of > York's Theatre's. In any case, this would never have been included in > Barrie's gift. > > (But just in case, I wrote to the copyright folks at the GOSH to confirm > this.) > > --Joel > > _______________________________________________ > Mutopia-discuss mailing list > Mutopia-discuss@mutopiaproject.org > http://lists.bcn.mythic-beasts.com/mailman/listinfo/mutopia-discuss >
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