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Chicago Manual of Style

 

Book – Single Author

Brown, Sandford.  Louis Armstrong.  New York: F. Watts, 1993.

 

Book – More than one Author

Montgomery, Elizabeth R. & Paul Frame.  Duke Ellington: King of Jazz.  New York: Garrard,

 

     1972.

Reference Book Article

According to The Chicago Manual of Style, 15th ed., page 715, well know reference books “are normally cited in notes rather than in bibliographies.  The facts of publication are often omitted, but the edition (if not the first) must be specified.  References to an alphabetically arranged work cite the item (not the volume or page number) preceded by s.v. (sub verbo, “under the word”…)  Check with your instructor for preference in citing reference book articles.

 

Example:  Encyclopedia of World Biography, 2nd ed., s.v. “Edward Kennedy Ellington.”

 

Article From Newspaper

Hentoff, Nat.  “Satch and the Duke Together Again.”  The Wall Street Journal, Sept. 27,

 

     2000, Eastern ed.: A24.

 

Article From Print Journal or Magazine

Ochs, Susie.  “Students Ride Ellington Express.”  Down Beat (October 1999):23.

 

Article From Journal or Magazine Online

Tolson, Jay.  “The Duke and the Poet.”  U.S. News & World Report.  July 8, 2002,

 

     http://search.epnet.com (accessed June 20, 2003).

     

Internet Site

Ricci, Michael.  who do you consider to be the most influential jazz musician(s) of the

 

     century?” All About Jazz. http://www.allaboutjazz.com/threads/century.htm (accessed

 

     May 8, 2001)

 

Radio Show

Duke Ellington, interview by Bob Edwards, Morning Edition, NPR, May 13, 1993.

 

Personal Interview

Duke Ellington (jazz musician) in discussion with the author at the Duke Ellington School of the

 

     Arts in Washington, D.C., July 22, 1993.

 

Videotape

Jazz. VHS.  Dir. Ken Burns.  Los Angeles, CA: Warner Home Video, 2000.

 

CD or Audiocassette

Ellington, Duke.  Duke Ellington: Greatest Hits. New York:  RCA Victor, 1996. Audiocassette.