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Kaitlyn Laprise

Final Scavenger Hunt


1. For this question, I started by searching Jan Hirschmann as an author and
Mozart as a keyword on the ProQuest research library database. This brought
two results, one of which is What Killed Mozart? from 2001. I clicked on the
article, and then clicked get it which brought me to the IC library catalog for
the Archives of Internal Medicine. I was able to find the book on the shelves,
but IC only has articles dating back to 2005. So, I searched on google books
to see if the article was cited anywhere online and found a book called The
Mammoth Book of Cover-Ups which cites the exact article that I found on
ProQuest. In the quote by Hirschmann that is cited in this book, Hirschmann
says a worm called Trichinella, which is commonly found in poorly cooked
pork, is what actually killed Mozart.
2. I searched on Oxford Music Online for Monteverdi, and clicked on his
biography and then on the section for his works. I found Apollo in his list of
Dramatic works and it says that it is only known from his letters, which is
likely why it isnt in his complete works set. They believe it was premiered in
Mantua at the ducal palace in February, 1620.
3. For this question, I used the Directory of Music Faculties in Colleges and
Universities for the US and Canada from 2014-2015. In the alphabetical index
for faculty, I looked for Perialas, and found it in NY1800 on page 265, which is
the IC listing. Hes an Associate Professor who specializes in Sound
Technology (35C), Recording Industry (35D), Recording Technology (35G), and
Acoustics (13L). I found the explanation for these codes on the inside of the
back cover.
4. I searched the EBSCO databases for Snodgrass as an author and aural skills
as a keyword. This brought just one result which was an article written in
2007 called The 8:00 a. m. Kazoo Experience.
5. I looked in the Musical America directory in the categorical index of
advertisers. Under the artist managers category, I found the Arts
Management Group on p. 83. On that page, they have all of their artists that
they represent listed, and listed under Special Attractions was the 37member ensemble called the Accordion Virtuosi of Russia.
6. I searched for rubbish in the Invecticon index of the Lexicon of Musical
Invective and looked at all of the pages where rubbish was used until I
eventually found on p. 147 that Saint-Saens music was described this way by
J. F. Runciman from the Saturday Review in London.
7. I searched Oxford Music Online for likembe and clicked on the first article
from the New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, which says its a type of lamellaphone.
I then clicked on that link which brought me to more full definition from the
same book: An instrument with a set of tuned lamellae, or tongues, fitted to
a resonating box or board. The entry says later that mbiras, kalimbas, and
likembes are all types of lamellaphones.
8. For this question, I used RISM series B volume 1. The 2 nd entry in the book is
Petruccis anthology from 1502 and the composer who has the most music
included in this anthology is G. van Weerbecke. The country/library code is I

Bc; I is for Italy, and Bc is for the Biblioteca del Conservatorio (Liceo Musicale)
in Bologna.
9. I first went to the link and saw that the piece was for Glasharmonika, and
then went to Oxford Music Onlines article for Mozart and found his works
section. I couldnt find any pieces listed for Glasharmonika, so instead I did a
find on page search for the KV number (617a) which brought me to the
piece which was written in 1791. There is only one more full piece listed for
Armonica, flute, oboe, viola, and cello, which is called Adagio and Rondo K
617.
10.I searched RISM online for our bonny boots and it brought me to only one
song composed by Thomas Morley. The link at the bottom of the page says it
can be found in London in the Madrigal Society at the Royal College of Music.
11.Using the same RISM entry as the previous question, I found that it was
printed in 1597 in Canzonets, or little short aers to five and sixe voices. So,
I searched for Canzonets and Morley on IMSLP, chose the collection for 5 or 6
voices, and was brought to a page with 5 different sets of the collection. One
is the original complete parts published by Peter Short in 1597. To find a
modernized version originally in print and scanned to be put online, I first
searched the IC catalog for the collection and found that the library has a
book with the complete set in modern print. I then searched for this collection
title on the Hathitrust website and found the book which uses modern
notation for the song.
12.I went on RiDiM and searched their database for Decamps, which found two
works by him. I clicked on Musical Monkeys and looked at the entry and the
image. The monkeys look like theyre playing a violin duet from music on a
stand, and its dimensions are 41 cm x 48.5 cm.
13.I found Tchaikovskys Thematic Catalogue (it turns out, the ue is very
important in the IC catalog search!) in the IC library catalog and pulled it out
of the reference section. I then used the CW index to find number 255, which
is a song called Sleep, Poor Friend found on page 616 of the book. The
tempo marking at the beginning is Andante non tanto.
14.I used Kuhns Music Since 1900 and found the date on page 137. On this
date, Leonid Sabaneyev published a review of a cancelled performance of
Prokofievs Scythian Suite in a Moscow newspaper called News of the Season.
15.I found the Parsons Directory of Tunes, searched in the section of the book for
Popular Tunes, and found this pattern on p. 231. The title of the piece is
Sleigh Ride by Leroy Anderson.
16.I looked in the index of Music Education Source Readings from Ancient
Greece to Today for Cole, Samuel Winkley. His address is found on p. 69 in
the book, and was published in 1903 by the Journal of Proceedings and
Addresses of the 42nd Annual Meeting of the National Education Association.
17.I found RISM C volume II for 16 European Countries including Germany. I then
found Koln starting on p. 178, and the Joseph Haydn Institute is listed in Koln
which, of course, has a lot of resources related to Haydn.
18.I searched Oxford Music Online for Schumann, and then clicked on Robert
Schumann. Once there, I went to his works page and did a find on page
search for Phantasiestucke to find the piece which is opus number 88 and the

composition date is 1842. Then, I did the same kind of search for
Fantasiestucke and found some keyboard pieces, but the only other chamber
music piece with this title is his opus 73, which was composed in 1849.
19.After looking up both pieces on Oxford Music Online to find the volume
numbers for the previous question, I then found both pieces in volumes 2 and
3 of the older version of Schumanns complete works, which are both in the
same book. The one that has the 4th movement titled Finale: Im Marsch
Tempo is Phantasiestucke, which is in volume 2 starting on page 124.
20.I used Drones Musical AKAs and looked in Chapter 2, which is the section
listed by original name, for James Rushing. Besides being called Jimmy, his
other nicknames are Honey Bunny Boo and Mr. Five by Five.

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