Special Collections
Southbank Library Special Collections
The Southbank Library has an extensive range of Special Collections to support your research. They are one part of the larger group of the University of Melbourne Cultural Collections, which Include the Rare Books collection, the Print collection and the Rare Music collection. Items in these collections are housed in special conditions by reason of their age, value, or uniqueness in order to ensure their care and preservation for current and future generations of scholars and researchers and as a record of our cultural history.
To access the collections: check the catalogue, note call number and request at the service desk at the Southbank Library in The Hub Building (Building 863) or request via email. Please check the Southbank library hours to avoid disappointment.
General Collections
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Theses / Dissertations
Graduate Diploma, Masters and PhD research theses.
Theses are listed on the library catalogue and can be searched by the usual author, title, subject or keyword options.Some may only be available to read in the Special Collections Reading Room, Baillieu Library. Please note catalogue location when searching.
A comprehensive list of music theses can be found via a KEYWORD search using "music AND thesis AND university AND Melbourne".
Note: recent theses are available online in the Institutional Repository
See also:
Finding theses libguideVictorian College of the Arts - Theses Collection: https://hdl.handle.net/11343/335
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Consists of books, artist books, exhibition catalogues relating to music, visual and performing arts.
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Consists of handbooks, prospectus, programs and ephemera relating to the Victorian College of the Arts.
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Th collection consists of the surviving books from the NGS Library which were transferred to the Victorian College of the Arts Library when it was founded in 1975.
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Here you will find the open access research outputs of staff and students, including journal articles, books and chapters, and theses.
Fine Arts and Music community
https://hdl.handle.net/11343/317Victorian College of the Arts - Theses Collection:
https://hdl.handle.net/11343/335Victorian College of the Arts - Research Publications
https://hdl.handle.net/11343/334
Music special Collections
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Rare Music is one of the University’s Special Collections. The collection includes manuscripts, printed music and books about music, archival collections and other music-related materials that are rare and, in some cases, unique. The collection is stored in a secure, climate-controlled environment. While items cannot be borrowed by individuals or viewed in the Southbank Library, requests for access to material are warmly welcomed.
Rare Music is located in the University’s Special Collections At the Baillieu Library.
- Most items can be found in the University Library catalogue. Select Baillieu Special Collections from drop down box.
- View Rare Music items in the Reading Room, 3rd floor Baillieu Library, Parkville Campus
- Use the request management system AEON to place your request
- Allow several days for your request to be delivered
- AEON also allows you to place a request for digital images of Rare Music items
Find out more about this exciting collection of more than 12,000 items, or contact the Curator for more information.
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Australian Composers Recordings Online
Australian Composers Off-Air Sound Recordings.
see also:
Music in Australia: libguideThis guide will point you to resources in Australian music at the University of Melbourne Library and beyond.
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Undergraduate Theses and Special Studies, Faculty of Music
We hold a separate collection of of Melbourne Conservatorium of Music undergraduate theses, research papers including honours essays, masters preliminary research, and other materials which are available for reading within the Library.
Undergraduate Theses and Special Studies are listed on the Library's catalogue and can be searched by author, title, or keyword options. Each work has a call number beginning with SS.- Undergraduate Theses and Special Studies - Listed by author name
- Undergraduate Theses and Special Studies - Listed broadly by year
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The collection of concert and theatre programs focusing on the musical life in Melbourne Australia 1860s-2008 (70% of the collection). The remainder of the Collection covers overseas (20%) and interstate (10%) concerts of the same period.
The collection charts the development of Melbourne's first orchestras, various exhibitions and musical festivals (such as the Christmas Festival of 1882 and the International Exhibition Concerts in 1888), the foundation of the Ormond Chair of Music, and later the Musica Viva Society, visits by renowned professional musicians such as Charles and Lady Hallé, Fritz Kreisler, Ignaz Friedman, and Artur Schnabel, the Viennese Boys' Choir, the Ballets Russes, and the Olympic Games Music Festival of 1956.
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Collected editions are scholarly compiled editions of musical scores which present the output of particular composers and genres from the 12th to the 21st centuries.
They are a key resource fundamental to music study and research on a wide range of topics. This extensive collection of important editions of music is one of the jewels in our library.
Collected editions are for library use only and cannot be borrowed. They are marked in the library catalogue with the location UniM Southbank CE.
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Albert H. Maggs of Toorak in Victoria, bookmaker, presented to the University in 1966 a sum of money for the purpose of founding an award to be known as "The Albert H. Maggs Composition Award" with the expressed wish that this award should encourage and assist composers of classical music who might otherwise abandon their efforts for want of means.
The following is a list of the recipients of the award and the works held in Rare Music, Special Collections.
Year
Composer
Commissioned Work
1967
NIGEL BUTTERLEY
1968
LARRY SITSKY
1969
COLIN BRUMBY
A Ballade for St. Cecilia : Cantata for Chorus, Orchestra and Soloists
1970
KEITH HUMBLE
1971
RAYMOND HANSON
1972
GEORGE DREYFUS
1973
GRAHAM HAIR
1974
DONALD HOLLIER
Concerto V : recitatives, rhymes and rhythms for grand organ, two pianoforte and percussion
1975
ANN CARR-BOYD
1975
GEORGE TIBBITS
1976
ERIC GROSS
1977
TRISTRAM CARY
Strands : for two pianos and four tracks of computer generated sound
1978
BARRY CONYNGHAM
1979
VINCENT PLUSH
Sinfonia
1979
RICHARD HAMES
No.13 Ku : for solo recorder, dancer and multiple tape-delay system
1980
DAVID WORRALL
1981
LARRY SITSKY
1982
RICHARD MILLS
No score received - 2/7/96.
1983
BOZIDAR KOS
No score received - 2/7/96.
1984
BRENTON BROADSTOCK
1985
ANDREW SCHULTZ
Reading a View : for 2 soprano soloists, SATB choir and orchestra
1986
WARREN BURT
1987
CHU WANGHUA
1988
JULIAN YU
1989
No award made
1990
MARY FINSTERER
1991
STEPHEN CRONIN
1992
MARK POLLARD
1992
MARK POLLARD
'A view from the beach' : Symphony no.1 - to Gemma 'Revised score'
1993
LESLEIGH THOMPSON
1994
GERARD BROPHY
Trip : for 2 flutes, oboe, 2 clarinets in B flat, 2 bassoons and 2 horns in F
1995
THOMAS REINER
1996
WILFRED LEHMANN
1997
DAVID JOSEPH
1998
CHRISTOPHER WILLCOCK
Akhmatova Requiem : song cycle for soprano, strings and percussion
1999
WILFRED LEHMANN
Suite in four movements : for harp, flute, cor anglais and violin
2000
GERARD BROPHY
2001
STUART GREENBAUM
2002
LAWRENCE WHIFFIN
Concerto for violin and five instruments
2003
DOMINIK KARSKI
2004
NIGEL BUTTERLEY
2005
JOHN PETERSON
2006
JOHANNA SELLECK
2007
MARK ISAACS
2008
BARRY CONYNGHAM
2009
KATE NEAL
2010
PAUL STANHOPE
I wasn't one of the six million : for solo soprano, cello, SATB choir with optional oud
2011
KATY ABBOTT
2012
ANDREW FORD
Once upon a time there were two brothers ... : for solo flute and speaking voice
2013
BRENTON BROADSTOCK
2014
TIM DARGAVILLE
2015
JULIAN YU
2016
PETER KNIGHT
Diomira
2017
LACHLAN SKIPWORTH
Spiritus
2018
NATALIE WILLIAMS
Saudade
2019
Moonlite
2020
Sacred Sky
2021
A Room of Her Own
2022
The Call
2023
Preludes, Book I
Up to date list: Australian Music Centre
Research Collections
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Margaret Lasica was a pioneering contemporary dance choreographer and educator in Melbourne. The collection was donated by the Lasica Family. These collections provide a cohesive reflection of the influences behind the artistic creativity of Margaret Lasica’s career in dance.
The collection consists of approximately 1,200 books and journals relating mainly to dance, but including drama, costume, theatre production, psychology, art, literature and cultural studies, as supporting material.
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This is a collection of 15th to 19th century music imprints, first editions and music manuscripts. The items were acquired between 1929 and 1931 by Louise Hanson-Dyer, 1884-1962, who went on to found the music press, Editions de l'Oiseau-Lyre, in 1932. They were transferred to Melbourne in 2005, and in 2006 the Lyrebird Press was established to continue this work.
Access the Collection
Search the catalogue for the complete Louise Hanson-Dyer Gift Collection.
- Catalogue of the collection :
UniM Music REF 016.78026099451 HERL
Herlin, Denis.
Catalogue de la Collection musicale Hanson-Dyer, Université de Melbourne = Catalogue of the Hanson-Dyer music collection, The University of Melbourne / Denis Herlin.
Australia [Parkville, Vic.] : Lyrebird Press, c2006. - Catalogue of the 2006 exhibition :
UniM Music F 780.749451 UNIV
University of Melbourne. Hanson-Dyer music collection.
Bowerbird to lyrebird : the Louise Hanson-Dyer music collection : a Baillieu Library exhibition, 3 August to 24 September 2006 / curators, Richard Excell and Jennifer Hill.
[Parkville, Vic.] : University of Melbourne, c2006.
View the Collection
Twenty-four hours notice must be given prior to viewing and items are viewed in the Reading Room located on the third floor of the Baillieu Library.
- Catalogue of the collection :
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Ernest John Moeran was an English composer (1894-1950). His compositions reflect his English and Irish heritage and are based strongly on folk tunes from the counties in which he lived and dwelt.
The collection of music by E J Moeran at the Southbank Library was bequeathed to the Victorian College of the Arts by Peers Coetmore (1905-1976), cellist and wife of E J Moeran. Peers Coetmore was a cello lecturer at the VCA in the 1970s. The collection contains 107 items in all. Forty-one of these are original manuscripts and the other 65 are early-published editions.
Access: The collection has been digitised and is freely available.
To view the physical items, see the library catalogue listing. Each title is also catalogued individually. The collection is available for consultation in the Southbank Library on consultation with the Fine Arts and Music Librarian. It is not for loan.
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In 2008, the Ian Potter Foundation made a generous grant to the Louise Hanson-Dyer Music Collection for the acquisition, cataloguing and preservation of the Barry Tuckwell Collection. Barry Tuckwell is widely recognised as the foremost French horn player of his generation.
Contained in the Collection are: printed (some pre-publication proofs) and manuscript scores, including works written for, dedicated to and edited or annotated by Tuckwell; sound recordings in various formats, commercial and non-commercial; correspondence with composers, conductors, other performers, instrument makers, administrators and others; diaries; documents related to the London Symphony Orchestra, in particular for the period when Tuckwell was its Chairman; concert programmes; posters (not in boxes, some framed); press clippings; photographs; inventories and trade catalogues.The concert programs in the collection span Tuckwell’s career from the mid 1940s until his retirement as a performer. A large proportion feature performing groups with which Tuckwell was associated, such as the London Symphony Orchestra, the Tuckwell Wind Quintet and the Jones, Tuckwell and Langbein Trio. Tuckwell’s international solo career is also fully documented. A program listing is currently underway.
The Barry Tuckwell Collection is a significant and comprehensive resource for anyone researching any aspect of Tuckwell’s professional career and for those interested more generally in twentieth-century horn repertoire or performance practice.
Please see the The Barry Tuckwell Collection subject research guide for further information on the scores, recordings, correspondence and other materials of the Barry Tuckwell Collection.
Catalogue record: Barry Tuckwell Collection
Library Guide: The Barry Tuckwell Collection is an aid to the scores, recordings, correspondence and other materials of the Barry Tuckwell Collection.
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By the time of his appointment as first Ormond Professor of Music at the University of Melbourne in 1891 the English composer G.W.L. Marshall-Hall (1862–1915) had composed three operas, orchestral works and numerous songs. In 1901 a well-known English critic ranked him as a greater composer than Delius, Elgar, Granville Bantock and Hamish MacCunn, calling him “by far the most impressive personality.” By then Australian musicians had discovered that he was also one of the finest conductors of his time. In Melbourne he conducted the Marshall-Hall Orchestra for the twenty years of its existence, from 1892 to 1912, established two conservatoriums and composed another two operas, numerous picturesque orchestral works including two symphonies, as well as string quartets and other chamber works, and incidental music to local dramatic productions.
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ART150 was a celebration throughout 2017 of the distinguished history of the Victorian College of the Art’s School of Art, its genesis in the National Gallery Art School in the 19th century, its rich 20th-century history and its 21st-century present and future.
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John Hopkins Collection of Orchestral Scores copies stamped "John Hopkins Collection" in black ink on cover and "Australian National Academy of Music" in green ink.
From the estate of John Hopkins.
Select Digitised Collections
External Collections
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VCA Film and Television Archive
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Music
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Visual Arts
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University Art Collection
The University of Melbourne Art Collection is the largest University-based art collection in Australia, compromising over 18,000 artworks. The collection includes major holdings of paintings, prints and drawings, ceramics, and sculpture, including contemporary Australian art and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art.