The history and success of ISMN (International Standard Music Number) and outlook for the future.
Walravens, Hartmut ; Unger, Carolin
1. Definition
The term International Standard Music Number is a bit fuzzy, like
many other terms. It applies only a part of the wide semantic field
"music", namely notated music, not live music, or recorded
music. In German it is more precise as the "M" is rendered
there "Musikalie," meaning "printed music". There
would have been ways to provide a better fitting term internationally
but it would have been unwieldy and longer. ISMN is also a nice
four-letter-word, and good company with ISBN and ISSN.
2. Standard
ISMN has been an ISO standard, ISO 10957, since 1993 when it was
first published. It was designed to fill the needs of the music
publishing scene which observed the success of the ISBN in the book
publishing world. A similar rationalizing factor would speed up ordering
and distribution, would allow comprehensive computerization of
businesses and thus save staff, time, and money. Some music publishers
had already adopted the ISBN for this purpose, disregarding the clear
exclusion of music from that standard.
3. History
The timeline for the development of the ISMN standard begins in
1984:
* 1984: First incentive for an ISMN at IAML (UK) conference.
* 1986: Original proposal for an ISMN by the IAML (UK), put forward
by Alan Pope (Blackwell's Music Department, Oxford) and Malcolm
Lewis (music librarian in Nottingham).
* 1987: Draft ISMN structure and application presented at the IAML
conference in Amsterdam.
* 1989: At the IAML conference in Oxford it was decided that the
UK, French and German branches should, through their respective national
standards bodies file ISMN as an ISO work project.
* 1993: Publication of ISO Standard 10957: 10-digits starting with
letter <M>
* 1993: Establishment of the International ISMN Agency at the
Berlin State Library Prussian Cultural Foundation
* 1994:
** The first three agencies: Germany, Italy, Lithuania
** Publication of the first edition of the ISMN Newsletter
* 1995: Publication of the Preliminary Edition of the Users'
Manual
* 2006: ISMN turns into a registered membership association
represented by a Board of Directors (Dr. Hartmut Walravens, Dr. Joachim
Jaenecke) and a Treasurer (Dr. Bettina von Seyfried)
*2007: Move to new premises in Berlin
*2008:
** The revision of the ISMN ISO standard changes the formerly
10-digit ISMN (which had started with the letter M for music) into a
13-digit number.
** Publication of the latest edition of the Users' Manual
(4th, revised edition)
* 2014: 56 agencies
The present standard was developed from a draft prepared by members
of IAML-UK and proposed by Alan Pope and Malcolm Lewis. It was clearly
modeled on the ISBN but it did not have a country code--a group
number--as the ISBN. Instead there was a constant "M" (for
music) in order to clearly distinguish it from the ISBN. The discussions
of the working group towards the creation of the ISMN standard were
seriously hampered by the fact that there was an alternative proposal
supported by Arnold Broido, Chairman of the music publisher Theodore
Presser and successively President and Vice President of the
International Music Publishers Association. It had a more
bibliographical twist and required connections between publications that
belonged together, e.g., full score and parts. While this made perfect
sense, most numbering experts were convinced that in the future nobody
would be interested in analyzing numbers--standard identifiers would
just be used like telephone numbers or product codes and would be
handled by computers. The British proposal was more computer-friendly,
and finally prevailed. Another issue was the initial "M" which
at that time could not be processed easily by some computer systems; and
it was not possible to use it in the bar code. But here the music sector
insisted, and the "M" became part of the number.
But the new number had a feature which made it superior to the
traditional ISBN: Emery Koltay (at that time director of standards at
Bowker, New York) designed a check digit calculation routine that
allowed turning an ISMN into a bar code without further calculation,
just by adding the EAN code "979" in front. In contrast, when
the ISBN changed to the 13-digit format, this occasioned different check
digits.
4. Structure
The ISMN consists of 4 parts and has 13 digits.
1. Prefix: Since the revision of the Standard in 2008, the prefix
for notated music is 979-0. Before then, ISMNs started with the letter M
followed by 9 digits.
2. Publisher Element: The publisher element consists of 3 to 7
digits depending on the output of a publisher. Publishers with a large
output are assigned short publisher elements; publishers with a small
output are assigned longer publisher elements.
3. Item: Next comes the item element which can consist of 1 to 6
digits.
4. Check Digit: It confirms the mathematical plausibility of the
number.
5. Administration
Most standards are published and may then serve as guidelines for
the respective target group, without further ado. Some standards,
however, require constant supervision and registration, such as standard
identifiers. In such cases, ISO contracts with a suitable organisation
to serve as maintenance agency that prepares and updates implementation
rules, provides information and training, and supervises the system. In
the case of the ISMN it is the International ISMN Agency in Berlin.
So far it has appointed 56 national or regional agencies to keep in
direct contact with publishers, assign blocks of numbers to them, and
register their data. The publishers or producers are required to
register the metadata corresponding to the numbers and make them
available in trade directories or national bibliographies.
6. Implementation
Introducing the ISMN in a country is usually not easy. Notated
music is rarely in the centre of attention, and more often than not
there is no information on the music producing publishers except for the
few major ones.
In order to implement ISMN in a country or region, one has to
search for a suitable institution that has contacts with publishers and
would be able to advise the user community. The publication metadata
should be made available, as mentioned.
7. Application
The main objective of the ISMN is the unique identification of
notated music publications. This is the prerequisite for computerizing
operations as we are accustomed to seeing these kinds of identifiers in
supermarkets and department stores. Thus the added value for the user
community is in the applications of the number which in itself is rather
neutral, not to say dumb as experts say. Only when a set of metadata is
linked to the number it becomes meaningful.
All this is not new--many publishers have numbered their
publications for decades and used these numbers for their processing of
transactions. As there may be theoretically as many proprietary
numbering systems as music publishers their value is rather limited;
they do work, however, mainly for large companies. Some older
well-trained staff at music stores still remembers by heart many Schott,
or Hohner numbers, for example.
Once an ISMN is assigned it can never be used for another item--in
the case of an error the number will be cancelled and a new one
assigned.
Application by publishers:
Production, advertising, shipping, billing, returns, statistics,
rights management, licensing, stock control ...
Application by music stores:
Search, ordering, shipping, sales, statistics, stock-control
Application by libraries:
Search, selection, acquisition, cataloguing, legal deposit
8. Resolution service
It is of the utmost importance to be able to easily resolve ISMN.
In many countries this is done by means of the national bibliography
which is usually available as an online service.
As music is not tied to language areas, a more elegant resolution
would be through a music-in-print publication. Such a directory is in
existence and growing: IDNV, published by the German ISMN Agency
(currently 610,000 records). It is well-designed but has not reached a
critical mass of titles that would make it so attractive to large
stores, wholesalers and distributors that they would prefer to license
it instead of maintaining their own data. The music in print would then
become the online basis for bibliographic searches and ordering.
9. OPAC solutions
Total numbering would open up new readers' services for
libraries. The National Library of Australia's TROVE has the option
of linking different aspects of a subject. If, for example, somebody
searches for a Verdi opera in the OPAC he may also be shown, besides the
score and the libretto, unpublished material by or on Verdi, a video of
a performance of this opera, Verdi's portrait, Verdi biographies,
an edition of Verdi's letters, a sound recording of the opera, or
parts thereof, and so on. The options are unlimited and of course not
restricted to one library or institution. For example it would be
possible to announce the performance of this opera in the Sydney Opera
House, with a link to buy tickets.
Here you see two examples, just a few components among many others.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
10. Benefits
Nobody would spend a moment on ISMN if it did not offer benefits.
The practical challenge is that a large number of titles has to be part
of the project first before the advantages show. For example, if most
new acquisitions in a library do not have ISMN there is little advantage
in establishing a copy cataloguing routine. Thus all partners in the
music sector will have to be patient, apply the ISMN and make it
visible--then the turning-point will be reached soon.
Some of the benefits include:
* unique identification of any music publication
* efficient ordering and distribution of music publications
* fast accounting, billing, and processing in general
* the compilation of trade directories (Music in Print)
* the use of the bar code
* the use of electronic point of sale systems
* efficient rights management
* easy copy cataloguing in libraries
* the compilation of up-to-date sales statistics
* the administration of the national lending right, etc.
* linking with related standards
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
11. ISMN and ISBN
As ISMN and ISBN are admittedly very close the question is: Do we
need a separate ISMN standard* This question is often asked and was
repeated in the context of the revision of the standard. It is true,
just looking at the technical side of the identifiers, ISBN would be
able to cover also music publications. There are a number of practical
reasons, however, which exclude this "easy" solution:
* Some ISBN agencies, especially those connected with private
companies, refuse to cover music publications, owing to lack of
experience in this field. Sharing contingents of numbers within one
country would easily lead to confusion.
*The music sector (publishing, trade) is organised quite
differently from the book sector; supply and distribution channels have
not been the same.
*There are distribution forms which do not exist in the book-trade,
e.g., hire materials.
* Many people (including staff) are music illiterate--they cannot
read music.
* In contrast to Books in Print, Music in Print should be an
international directory.
* Music is clearly excluded from ISBN in the text of the standard.
* Music publications can be easily filtered out of the huge amount
of other publications by means of the ISMN and thus used for Music in
Print and other purposes. Customers do not have to search the needle in
a haystack, namely music among millions of non-music items.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
12. Rights management
Royalties and rights management are important elements in the music
business. The formerly time-consuming process of reporting, matching and
calculating might actually shrink to seconds if the necessary links were
in place, namely from ISMN to the ISWC (work) and then to the ISNI
(composer or rights holder).
13. Interoperability with other ISO standards
ISMN is part of a whole family of international standard
identifiers the first of which was ISBN. If we put the music standards
in relation we might come up with the following diagram. This whole
network provides good coverage of the publication sector and contributes
to efficient bibliographic control, facilitates many trade applications,
and allows for low-cost rights administration.
14. Outlook, Challenges, Things to do or to cope with
Looking at the music business over the past 30 years since the
creation of the ISMN project, we see the following as items to be
considered for the future. Some of these items are points that have been
ignored up to now (such as backlists and hire material) and other points
are new (digital or print-on-demand scores).
Hire materials should be included in the Music in Print directory.
The transaction is similar to a sale or lending by a library and could
easily be based on the same metadata collection.
Publishers should be encouraged to enter their backlists in the
Music in Print. This is often not done because of the work and staff
time involved. But wouldn't it be possible to use the large data
files of major music libraries for copy cataloguing* It would not only
be a service to the publishers themselves but also to the customers who
may not be aware what is still available (in one form or another).
Electronic publications are sometimes forgotten when it comes to
numbering. The media does not play any role with regard to ISMN. There
seems to be a prejudice according to which ISMN and ISBN are applicable
only to print--this is definitely wrong: these identifiers are even
compatible with DOI (Digital Object identifier) and may be integrated in
its syntax.
While the ISMN is basically for publications we encounter the
situation that musical works cannot be printed for reason of cost and
are deposited with a Music Information Centre or similar institution
which makes them available on request as scan or copy. The ISMN could
rationalize such transactions and allow listing in Music in Print.
ISMN is also a convenient identifier for licensing systems. When an
item is scanned for distribution--as printing may be too expensive--it
may be offered for downloading (for a fee). The procedure is practically
the same as with buying ebooks.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
There is a large number of internet suppliers that offer tens of
thousands of musical works (for downloading). They are not interested in
using the ISMN--perhaps because some of them do not want to reveal the
origin of their material?
Music statistics in Spanish and Portuguese-speaking countries
reflect different principles than in other countries. Since the
membership contribution of the ISMN agencies is based on the annual
output of notated music publications in a country, this makes it
difficult to compare the figures. For example following such figures,
Argentina seems to be the second-largest music country in the world
(which it is obviously not).
There has been a law in Poland exempting publications with ISBN
from VAT (in an attempt to support the publishing industry and national
education). It is practically impossible to prevent the music publishers
from assigning ISBN to their publications--for obvious reasons.
There had been reports from Scandinavia and the UK that Amazon
pressed music publishers to put ISBN on their publications. The reason
was not clear as ISMN and ISBN were technically completely compatible.
It seemed to be a misunderstanding but Amazon was large enough not to
care about such arguments from the user community. The International
Agency asked the numbering association GS 1 to mediate and they recently
updated their GTIN guidelines and included ISMN there.
Summary
The development of the ISMN has transformed access to notated music
by making it more accessible,: retrieval of individual titles or the
music production of a publisher, even a country, are made much easier,
ordering, borrowing (hiring) and distribution, whether in printed,
scanned or ebook format are facilitated. Catalogues and directories make
the music market more transparent, and company listings lose relevance.
Libraries profit from copy cataloguing, legal deposit institutions and
national bibliographies use ISMN as a simple means of control. With 56
countries now enrolled, we hope to implement all the benefits soon that
ISBN provided for the book world.
Hartmut Walravens and Carolin Unger (1)
(1.) Hartmut Walravens is founder and Chairman of the International
ISMN Agency in Berlin; Carolin Unger is the ISMN Coordinator. The paper
was read at the IAML Meeting in Antwerp, Belgium, on 15 July 2014.