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Music

An American in Paris
The original cover was re-used.

An American in Paris before treatment
Before treatment

An American in Paris after treatment
After treatment

An American in Paris
George Gershwin
[An American in Paris: a musical score]
Bound volume, 1928
Music Division

The original 1928 musical score for An American in Paris was donated to the Library of Congress in 1953. It was among the first bequests of Mrs. Leonore Gershwin (Ira's widow) in establishing the George and Ira Gershwin Collection. George Gershwin had the score bound in an elaborate gilt leather presentation binding.

Treatment: The spine of the presentation binding was inflexible, causing the brittle paper to crack when the volume ws opened. The score was disbound, and the pages were repaired. The folios were sewn to the outer folds of a concertina guard. This reduced the flexing of the pages upon opening and eliminated the cracking caused by the original spine structure of the binding. The book was rebound using the original covers, but the joints were slightly extended to accommodate the concertina guard.


Don Giovanni in Beethoven's Own Hand?!
Ludwig Beethoven
[Don Giovanni in Beethoven's Own Hand]
Music manuscript, 1803-1805
Music Division

The text of Mozart's Don Giovanni appears in German translation. Beethoven bibliographer George Kinsky assumed that Beethoven made this copy for study purposes in preparation for composing ensemble sections in Fidelio.

Treatment: The loose sheets of the unbound manuscript were discolored and slightly dirty. Stains and small tears could be seen. The pages were washed, deacidified and sized before being bound in a simple folder case.

Don Giovanni
Before treatment

Don Giovanni before treatment

Don Giovanni after treatment
After treatment


Stars & Strips Forever

Stars & Strips Forever
Stars & Strips Forever

"Stars and Stripes Forever"
John Phillip Sousa
[Stars and Stripes Forever]
Music manuscript, 1896
Music Division

John Philip Sousa (1854-1932) wrote this score for "The Stars and Stripes Forever," on April 26, 1897. First composed in 1896, it has become a musical calling card for our nation.

Treatment: Cellulose acetate lamination was removed from the document. It was then hinged to buffered support paper, encapsulated in polyester for protection, and bound.


Bach Cantata
Johann Sebastian Bach
Dominica 6. Post Trinitatis
(BWV9)
1730s
Music Division

In the early 1730s, Bach wrote his Cantata for the Sixth Sunday after Trinity, BWV9, 'Salvation has come to us here," drawing for the text from a hymn by Paul Speratus. The work was a late addition to his second annual cycle of cantatas composed in Leipzig in 1724-25, according to the J.S. Bach Composer Companion (1999), because "Bach and his wife were away from Leipzig for the sixth Sunday after Trinity in 1724....Bach prepared no new cantata for that week, but a decade later he filled this gap in the Chorale Cantata with BWV9."

Treatment: Conservators disbound and collated the manuscripts. They removed as much surface dirt and grime as possible by drycleaning. Each leave was deacidified with a non-aqueous alkaline solution. They mended damaged areas with Japanese tissue and wheat starch paste. Because the fragility of the brittle paper, especially where heavily inked, required maximum support to limit flexing and abrasion of the sheets while allowing optimum reader accessibility, they collaborated with the Music Division to separate the few remaining severely weakened folds and encapsulated individual leaves in polyester film. Conservators then matted these encapsulations and they were sewn into a linen support. They covered the binding in limp vellum, made vellum endsheets and endbands, and laced the whole together with alum-tawed goatskin.


Detail of manuscript


Encapsulated manuscript leaves


Completed binding



Page from the orchestral score


Revision pasted directly to score


Score was encapsulated and bound

Whole Brahms Manuscript
Johannes Brahms
[Concerto for Violin, Op. 77]
hand written manuscript
Music Division

This full score of Concerto for Violin, Op. 77, written in the hand of Johannes Brahms, was the product of a lengthy epistolary collaboration between Brahms and violinist Joseph Joachim. The masterpiece that emerged premiered in Leipzig, Germany, but the two continued to revise in red ink and red pencil, with Brahms focusing on the orchestral parts and Joachim the violin solo. This correspondence between composer and performer suggests the existence of at least one full score, one piano score, possibly two solo violin parts, and many orchestral parts, all undergoing any number of revisions and being transported back and forth across continental Europe and to and from London.

Treatment: This Brahms music manuscript was originally bound in a half calfskin with paper sides. The original leather was deteriorated and the boards were detached. Conservators disbound the music manuscript pages and encapsulated them between polyester sheets. They extended the top piece of the sheeting beyond the spine edge of the text to create a flange and drilled sewing holes along the spine edge of this polyester flange. They laid two-inch strips of linen and pared goatskin along the spine edge and side-sewed the text with linen thread. They constructed a box of four-ply matboard to fit over the sewn spine. The box was covered with linen which also extended to create a 2-inch flange, which they glued to the linen flange from the text. Finally, they used goatskin to cover this attached spine box and the boards, creating a 1/4 leather and linen cover.


American Chorale
Graduale Dominicale
1576
Second edition
Bound volume
Music Division

This second edition of the 1576 Graduale Dominicale, a large choral book, is the earliest 16th-century American musical imprint in the Library's collections. The Graduale is an early example of a liturgical book with music published in many of the Spanish colonies, and it is among the first books containing music printed in the Americas. The copy of the Graduale at the Library of Congress contains chants for the Proper of the Mass for the feasts of the Temporale for the whole liturgical year from the first Sunday in Advent to the 23rd Sunday after Pentecost.

The textblock had become detached from the leather covered, wooden-board binding. The pages were brittle and stiff from the sizing and had many previous repairs. Many of these repairs were large patches of paper adhered to the Graduale's pages with adhesives which were discolored and brittle. In some areas where there were losses of text restorers had filled in the missing text with pen and ink.

Treatment: The sewing was removed from the text block and the pages were separated. They were washed in water to remove the old sizing, paper patches and adhesives. The pages were immersed in an alkaline bath which deposited and alkaline reserve in the paper. They were then mended, losses were filled and folios were reattached using Japanese paper and wheat starch paste. Previous patches that contained replacement text were photocopied onto Japanese paper so that new fills with better quality paper, retained the information from the previous repair.


Before treatment


After treatment


Rhapsody

Rhapsody

Rhapsody in Blue
George Gershwin
[Rhapsody in Blue: a musical score]
Bound volume, 1924
Music Division

While most of the George and Ira Gershwin materials are in the Gershwin Collection, two manuscripts of the Rhapsody in Blue are in the Ferde Grofé Collection (Grofé made the original orchestrations of that work), and lyric sheets for five songs written by Ira Gershwin and Vernon Duke are found in the Duke Collection. In addition to the manuscripts of Gershwin's concert works, the Gershwin Collection has considerable manuscript music for his stage musicals--especially Of Thee I Sing ("Love Is Sweeping the Country") and Let 'Em Eat Cake ("Mine"). It also has material from his late songs for Hollywood musicals, with Gershwin's own piano accompaniments crafted carefully as an art song: "They Can't Take That away from Me," "Nice Work if You Can Get It," "Slap That Bass." The Division has full score, sketch score, typescript libretto, and sheaves of sketches for the archetypal American opera, Porgy and Bess. The Collection also contains material concerning Ira Gershwin, including letters to Ira from Kurt Weill written during their collaboration on Lady in the Dark.

Treatment: Conservators disbound the manuscript. They removed tissue guards and lightly dry cleaned the pages before pray deacidifiying them. They then mended and applied guards to the pages using Japanese paper. They repaired the decorated fly leaves, replacing white fly leaves with archival-quality paper. Book conservators sewed the manuscript to a concertina guard, using a long, non-adhesive stitch. They inserted a tube lining to allow more flexibility in the spine. They extended the original covers by creating grooved rather than tight joints and reattached them with new leather across the spine. Finally, the bookbinders reattached the previous spine over the new leather spine.


National Anthem
First printed edition of Star Spangled Banner
1814
Music Division

In 1814, Francis Scott Key wrote new words for a well-known drinking song, "To Anacreon in Heaven," to celebrate America's recent victory over the British. However, only in 1931, following a twenty-year effort during which more than forty bills and joint resolutions were introduced in Congress, was a law finally signed proclaiming "The Star Spangled Banner" to be the national anthem of the United States. The present copy, one of only five known to have been made by Key, is the earliest of four dating from the period 1840-1842 near the end of his life.

Treatment: Item had been silked many years ago. The silk was manually removed. The item was washed and deacidified. The item was fully lined with Japanese paper and placed in a window matte to provide support and to allow access and use.


Appalachian

Appalachian

Appalachian

Appalachian Spring
Aaron Copland

Holograph score
1924
Music Division

Appalachian Spring, with music by Aaron Copland and choreography by Martha Graham, was commissioned by and first performed at the Library in 1944. It won the Pulitzer Prize in 1945. Described by Graham as having "to do with roots in so far as people can express them without telling an actual story" it had a complex birth. Copland received three different scripts from Graham before beginning what he called his "Ballet for Martha" (Graham gave it the current title). When she heard the music, Graham decided to redo the action yet again. So, finally, there is no "script" for Appalachian Spring-only the dance.

Treatment: The two scores were not originally bound but housed in two portfolios. The individual pages were mended using Japanese tissue and wheat starch paste. They were encapsulated in polyester with acid-free paper inserts, to help slow deterioration. The polyester sleeve pages were post bound in green buckram and placed into especially made drop spine boxes.

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April 28, 2000