History:Work/Relationship Inheritance in Works Trees Proposal: Difference between revisions

From MusicBrainz Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
(→‎Relationship Inheritance Rules: Add: Exact duplicates don't matter)
m (CallerNo6 moved page Proposal:Work/Relationship Inheritance in Works Trees to History:Work/Relationship Inheritance in Works Trees Proposal: https://chatlogs.metabrainz.org/brainzbot/metabrainz/msg/3675767/)
 
(9 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 4: Line 4:
|status=RFC
|status=RFC
|discussion=
|discussion=
|rfc=http://lists.musicbrainz.org/pipermail/musicbrainz-style/2011-October/013880.html
|rfc=http://lists.musicbrainz.org/pipermail/musicbrainz-style/2011-November/013978.html
|rfv=
|rfv=
|style=1
|style=1
Line 11: Line 11:
}}
}}


MusicBrainz can represent metadata about musical compositions, and portions of those compositions, by using multiple [[Work]] entities linked together with [[Parts Relationship Type|"Parts" relationships]]. For instance, there is one Work entity for [http://musicbrainz.org/artist/1f9df192-a621-4f54-8850-2c5373b7eac9 Beethoven]'s ''[http://musicbrainz.org/work/c35b4956-d4f8-321a-865b-5b13d9ed192b Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 "Choral"]'', and four more for each of its movements ([http://musicbrainz.org/work/3308d248-b287-38e9-9718-0119d7a3bf9d I.], [http://musicbrainz.org/work/87f3a5a6-fb92-381b-892b-5fc50ed0f2c1 II]., [http://musicbrainz.org/work/4ebf3fc1-4dd4-361b-a441-bf1dc9421e34 III.], [http://musicbrainz.org/work/3761b925-82b2-3a61-9581-57751dee2e9e IV.]). A "Parts" relationship indicates that each movement's Work entity ''is a part of'' the Symphony's Work entity.
MusicBrainz can represent metadata about musical compositions, and portions of those compositions, by using multiple [[Work]] entities linked together with [[rt:ca8d3642-ce5f-49f8-91f2-125d72524e6a|"Parts" relationships]]. For instance, there is one Work entity for [[artist:1f9df192-a621-4f54-8850-2c5373b7eac9|Beethoven]]'s ''[[work:c35b4956-d4f8-321a-865b-5b13d9ed192b|Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 "Choral"]]'', and one more for each of its movements ([[work:3308d248-b287-38e9-9718-0119d7a3bf9d|I.]], [[work:87f3a5a6-fb92-381b-892b-5fc50ed0f2c1|II]]., [[work:4ebf3fc1-4dd4-361b-a441-bf1dc9421e34|III.]], [[work:3761b925-82b2-3a61-9581-57751dee2e9e|IV.]]). A "Parts" relationship indicates that each movement's Work ''is a part of'' the Symphony's Work.


This structure of linked Work entities is referred to as a '''Work Tree'''. Any Work entity which has a linked Work entity as a part of it, is a '''parent''' Work entity. The linked Entity, part of the Parent, is a '''child''' Work entity. Any Work entity which is not a Child is called the '''root''' of a Work Tree. The '''ancestors''' of a Work entity are the Parent, and the Parent's Ancestors. Similarly, the '''descendants''' of a Work entity are the Children of the entity, and each Child's Descendants.
This structure of linked Work entities is referred to as a '''Work Tree'''. Any Work entity which has a Relationship, "is part of" another Work entity, is a '''child''' Work. The linked Work, containing the Child, is a '''parent''' Work. Any Work which is not a Child is called the '''root''' of a Work Tree. The '''ancestors''' of a Work are the Work's Parent, and the Parent's Ancestors. Similarly, the '''descendants''' of a Work are the Work's Children, and each Child's Descendants.


Any Work entity which has no [[Parts Relationship Type|"Parts" relationships]] may be referred to as a '''stand-alone''' Work entity. These inheritance rules end up having no effect on a Stand-Alone entity's Relationships, even if you treat that entity as a very simple Work Tree with a Root and no Children.
Any Work which has no [[rt:ca8d3642-ce5f-49f8-91f2-125d72524e6a|"Parts" relationships]] is a '''stand-alone''' Work entity, a very simple Work Tree with a Root and no Children. These inheritance rules may be applied to a Stand-Alone Work. They turn out to have no effect.


The MusicBrainz database represents the fact that a composer composed a musical work, by means of a [[Composer Relationship Type|Composer Relationship]] between the Artist entity for the composer and the Work entity for the composition. If this relationship is attached to the Work entity for part of the composition, that has a different meaning than attaching it to the Work entity for just one movement. The [[Parts Relationship Type]] sets up inheritance between the parent and child Work entities, so that a Relationship attached to one of the Work entities has a meaning about the other entity. The same applies for the other Relationships on Work entities.
The MusicBrainz database represents the fact that a composer composed a musical work, by means of a [[Composer Relationship Type|Composer Relationship]] between the Artist entity for the composer and the Work entity for the composition. If this relationship is attached to the Work for a part of the composition, that has a different meaning than attaching it to the root Work. The [[rt:ca8d3642-ce5f-49f8-91f2-125d72524e6a|Parts Relationship Type]] sets up '''inheritance''' between the parent and child Works, so that a Relationship attached to one of the Works conveys a meaning about the other. The same inheritance applies for almost all Relationships on Work entities, not just the Composer Relationship.


==Relationship Inheritance Rules==
==Relationship Inheritance Rules==


Given two Work entities, which we'll call '''Parent''' and '''Child''', with a [[Parts Relationship Type]] saying "'''Child''' ''is a part of'' '''Parent'''", then the meaning of relationships to either Work entity (which are not [[Parts Relationship Type]] themselves) is as follows:
Given two Work entities, which we'll call '''Parent''' and '''Child''', with a [[rt:ca8d3642-ce5f-49f8-91f2-125d72524e6a|Parts Relationship Type]] saying "'''Child''' ''is a part of'' '''Parent'''", then the meaning of relationships to either Work entity (which are not [[rt:ca8d3642-ce5f-49f8-91f2-125d72524e6a|Parts Relationship Type]] themselves) is as follows:
;Indivisibility: Any relationship to a Work entity applies to the all of the composition to which a Work entity refers, and to any portion of it.
;Indivisibility: Any relationship to a Work entity applies to the all of the composition (or part of a composition) to which the Work refers, and to any portion of it. This applicability is called '''full coverage'''.
;All of Child inherits from Parent: Any relationship to '''Parent''', be it from an Artist, ReleaseGroup, Release, Label, URL, or Work (except for Work-Work [[Parts Relationship Type]]), means that the same relationship applies also to the entire portion of the musical composition to which '''Child''' refers, whether or not a corresponding relationship entry to '''Child''' is explicitly recorded.
;All of Child inherits from Parent: Any relationship to '''Parent''', be it from an Artist, ReleaseGroup, Release, Label, URL, or Work (except for Work-Work [[rt:ca8d3642-ce5f-49f8-91f2-125d72524e6a|Parts Relationship Type]]), means that the same relationship applies also to the entire portion of the musical composition to which '''Child''' refers (''i.e.'', with '''full coverage''').
;Some of Parent inherits from Child: Any relationship to '''Child''', be it from an Artist, ReleaseGroup, Release, Label, URL, or Work (except for Work-Work [[Parts Relationship Type]]), means that the same relationship applies to some non-zero portion, and maybe or maybe not all, of '''Parent''', even if no corresponding relationship entry to '''Parent''' is explicitly recorded.
;Some of Parent inherits from Child: Any relationship to '''Child''', be it from an Artist, ReleaseGroup, Release, Label, URL, or Work (except for Work-Work [[rt:ca8d3642-ce5f-49f8-91f2-125d72524e6a|Parts Relationship Type]]), means that the same relationship applies to some non-zero portion, and maybe or maybe not all, of '''Parent'''. This applicability is called '''partial coverage'''.
;Siblings don't inherit: Given another Work entity, '''Child 2''', which also has a [[Parts Relationship Type]] saying "'''Child 2''' ''is a part of'' '''Parent'''", then any relationship to '''Child''' does not imply any meaning about that relationship and '''Child 2'''. Inheritance passes between parent and child, but not from one child to another of the same parent.
;Siblings don't inherit: Given another Work entity, '''Child 2''', which also has a [[rt:ca8d3642-ce5f-49f8-91f2-125d72524e6a|Parts Relationship Type]] saying "'''Child 2''' ''is a part of'' '''Parent'''", then any relationship to '''Child''' does not imply any meaning about that relationship and '''Child 2'''. Inheritance passes between parent and child, but not from one child to another of the same parent.
;Inheritence is transitive: Given yet another Work entity, '''Grandchild''', which has a [[Parts Relationship Type]] saying "'''Grandchild''' ''is a part of'' '''Child'''", then any relationship which '''Child''' inherits from '''Parent''', '''Grandchild''' in turn inherits from '''Child''' (its parent). Any relationship which '''Child''' inherits from '''Grandchild''' (its own child), '''Parent''' in turn inherits from '''Child'''.
;Inheritance is transitive: Given yet another Work entity, '''Grandchild''', which has a [[rt:ca8d3642-ce5f-49f8-91f2-125d72524e6a|Parts Relationship Type]] saying "'''Grandchild''' ''is a part of'' '''Child'''", then any relationship which '''Child''' inherits from '''Parent''', '''Grandchild''' in turn inherits from '''Child''' (its parent). Any relationship which '''Child''' inherits from '''Grandchild''' (its own child), '''Parent''' in turn inherits from '''Child'''.
;Inheritance status matters: Anything which displays or interprets Relationships should present the distinction between inherited and direct Relationships, between inheritance from distant and immediately-linked relatives, and between full and partial coverage, in a way that's appropriate.
;Exact duplicates don't matter: If a Work entity has multiple of the exact same Relationship, whether from direct attachment or from inheritance, it has the same meaning as just one instance of that Relationship. Note that this only applies to ''exact'' duplicates, in Relationship Type, attributes, and applicability to all vs part of the work entity. If the Relationships aren't exact duplicates, then they each convey slightly different shades of meaning.


These rules cause inheritance for any [[Category:Relationship Family]] between a Work and any other entity (Artist, ReleaseGroup, Release, Label, URL, or Work), '''except''' for the [[Parts Relationship Type]] (Work-Work). The Parts Relationship Type defines the parent-child structure, so it doesn't itself inherit.
These rules cause inheritance for any [[:Category:Relationship Family|Relationship Family]] between a Work and any other entity (Artist, ReleaseGroup, Release, Label, URL, or Work), '''except''' for the [[rt:ca8d3642-ce5f-49f8-91f2-125d72524e6a|Parts Relationship Type]] (Work-Work). The Parts Relationship Type defines the parent-child structure, so it doesn't itself inherit.


==Discussion==
==Discussion==


Software which reads the MusicBrainz database implements relationship inheritance for a Work entity in a Work Tree. This software traverses the Parts Relationship Type links, and reports which Relationships affect the starting Work entity. Some Relationships will be attached directly to the entity, some will be inherited from ancestors, some will be inherited from descendants. Some Relationships will apply to the whole Work entity, some will apply to just some portion (and maybe or maybe not all) of it. As of October 2011, MusicBrainz software does not implement these inheritance rules. (However, it performs similar link traversals in other contexts, ''e.g.'' to get the Recording artists for a Work entity.)
Software which reads the MusicBrainz database is what implements Relationship inheritance for a Work in a Work Tree. This software traverses the Parts Relationship Type links, and reports which Relationships affect the starting Work. Some Relationships will be attached directly to the Work, some will be inherited from ancestors, some will be inherited from descendants. Some Relationships will apply to the whole Work, some will apply to just some portion (and maybe or maybe not all) of it. As of October 2011, MusicBrainz software does not implement these inheritance rules. (However, it performs similar link traversals in other contexts, ''e.g.'' to get the Recording artists for a Work.)


The inheritance rules do not themselves dictate where to apply Relationships to Work entities in a Works Tree. Until MusicBrainz software implements inheritance rules, applying Relationships to the lowest Work entity in the tree has the advantage that current software is most likely to detect them. However, this means multiple Relationships need to be applied to multiple partial-work entities in the tree, with a chance that they will accidentally be different, or that some entities will be missed. Applying Relationships to the highest Work entity in a tree, where it is still correct, has the advantage that relationships inherited to the lowest Works in the tree will be consistent and have complete coverage. It also has the advantage of lower data entry effort and lower storage requirements, though these are less important factors. However, until MusicBrainz software implements inheritance, they may be largely invisible.
The inheritance rules do not themselves dictate a [[Style]] guideline on where to apply Relationships to Works in a Work Tree. Until MusicBrainz software implements inheritance rules, a style of applying Relationships to the lowest Work in the tree has the advantage that current software is most likely to detect them. However, it requires multiple Relationships to be applied to multiple child Works in the tree, with a chance that they will accidentally be different, or that some Works will be missed. A style of applying Relationships to the highest Work in a tree, where they are still correct, has the advantage that relationships inherited to the lowest Works in the tree will be consistent and have complete coverage. It also has the advantage of lower data entry effort and lower storage requirements, though these are less important factors. However, until MusicBrainz software implements inheritance, the Relationships may be largely invisible.


It's completely valid to attach more than one [[Advanced Relationship]]s of the same type to the same Work entity. For instance, the composition popularly known as the "[[work:e27bda6e-531e-36d3-9cd7-b8ebc18e8c53|Mozart ''Requiem'']]" has Relationships to one [[Composer Relationship Type|composer]] ([[artist:b972f589-fb0e-474e-b64a-803b0364fa75|Mozart]]), one "additional" composer ([[artist:d3602c4f-bd37-49cd-b16d-a295e2a6659f|Süßmayr]]), and three [[Orchestrator Relationship Type|orchestrators]] ([[artist:b972f589-fb0e-474e-b64a-803b0364fa75|Mozart]], [[artist:d3602c4f-bd37-49cd-b16d-a295e2a6659f|Süßmayr]], and [[artist:9140f046-d57e-4643-9d08-ba094988f9e9|Freystädtler]]). Also, MusicBrainz has no way to cancel or override Relationships. Thus, all the Relationships a Work entity inherits, or has directly attached, are all valid. If there's a Work Tree where some Children need one Relationship "A", and other Children need a different relationship "B", then apply these Relationships to the Children. Do not apply either Relatioship, "A" or "B", to the Parent.
It's completely valid to attach more than one [[Advanced Relationship]] of the same type to the same Work entity. For instance, the composition popularly known as the "[[work:e27bda6e-531e-36d3-9cd7-b8ebc18e8c53|Mozart ''Requiem'']]" has Relationships to one [[Composer Relationship Type|composer]] ([[artist:b972f589-fb0e-474e-b64a-803b0364fa75|Mozart]]), one "additional" composer ([[artist:d3602c4f-bd37-49cd-b16d-a295e2a6659f|Süßmayr]]), and three [[Orchestrator Relationship Type|orchestrators]] ([[artist:b972f589-fb0e-474e-b64a-803b0364fa75|Mozart]], [[artist:d3602c4f-bd37-49cd-b16d-a295e2a6659f|Süßmayr]], and [[artist:9140f046-d57e-4643-9d08-ba094988f9e9|Freystädtler]]). Also, MusicBrainz has no way to cancel or override Relationships. Thus, all the Relationships a Work inherits, or has directly attached, are valid. If there's a Work Tree where some Children need one Relationship "A", and other Children need a different relationship "B", then apply these Relationships to the Children. Do not apply either Relatioship, "A" or "B", to the Parent.


Why does inheritance status matter? For a Work entity, a directly attached Relationship has slightly different significance than the same exact Relationship inherited from an Ancestor. The meaning of the Relationship itself is the same: both have "full coverage", and link to the same other entity. But it's possible for editors to apply Relationships without realising how other Works in the Tree will inherit the Relationship. Also, Relationships inherited from Descendants have only partial coverage, while directly attached Relationships have full coverage. Because these differences are likely significant to users of MusicBrainz, they should be display in some appropriate way.
The definitions for '''ancestors''' and '''descendants''' above are ''recursive''. This kind of definition works well for some people, and for mathematicians and computer scientists. It can be brain-twisting for many people. Here's another way to express those definitions. The Ancestors of a Work entity in a Work Tree are: that entity's Parent, the Parent's Parent, and so on back to the Root entity of the work tree. The Root entity itself has zero Ancestors. The Descendants of a Work entity in a Work Tree are: all of that entity's Children, and all of Children of the first Child, and all of Children of the second Child, and so on through all of the entity's Children, and all the Children's Children's Children, stopping at the final Work entities which themselves have no Children. Some entities in any Work Tree will have zero Children, and so zero Descendants.

The definitions for '''ancestors''' and '''descendants''' above are ''recursive''. This kind of definition works well for some people, and for mathematicians and computer scientists. It can be brain-twisting for many people. Here's another way to express those definitions. The Ancestors of a Work in a Work Tree are: that Work's Parent, the Parent's Parent, and so on back to the Root entity of the work tree. The Root Work itself has zero Ancestors. The Descendants of a Work in a Work Tree are: all of that Work's Children, and all of Children of the first Child, and all of Children of the second Child, and so on through all of the Work's Children, and all the Children's Children's Children, stopping at those final Works which themselves have no Children. Some Works in any Work Tree will have zero Children, and so zero Descendants.


==Examples==
==Examples==
Suppose there is one Work entity for [http://musicbrainz.org/artist/1f9df192-a621-4f54-8850-2c5373b7eac9 Beethoven]'s ''[http://musicbrainz.org/work/c35b4956-d4f8-321a-865b-5b13d9ed192b Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 "Choral"]''. (We're basing this example on actual MusicBrainz entries, with some embellishment.) There are four more Work entities for each of its movements ([http://musicbrainz.org/work/3308d248-b287-38e9-9718-0119d7a3bf9d I...], [http://musicbrainz.org/work/87f3a5a6-fb92-381b-892b-5fc50ed0f2c1 II...], [http://musicbrainz.org/work/4ebf3fc1-4dd4-361b-a441-bf1dc9421e34 III...], and ''[http://musicbrainz.org/work/3761b925-82b2-3a61-9581-57751dee2e9e IV. Finale. Presto - Allegro assai]''). Each movement is linked to the parent Work entity for the Symphony by a Parts Relationship Type.
Suppose there is one Work entity for [[artist:1f9df192-a621-4f54-8850-2c5373b7eac9|Beethoven]]'s ''[[work:c35b4956-d4f8-321a-865b-5b13d9ed192b|Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 "Choral"]]''. (We're basing this example on actual MusicBrainz entries, with some embellishment.) There is one more Work entities for each of its movements ([[work:3308d248-b287-38e9-9718-0119d7a3bf9d|I...]], [[work:87f3a5a6-fb92-381b-892b-5fc50ed0f2c1|II...]], [[work:4ebf3fc1-4dd4-361b-a441-bf1dc9421e34|III...]], and ''[[work:3761b925-82b2-3a61-9581-57751dee2e9e|IV. Finale. Presto - Allegro assai]]''). Each movement's Work is linked to the root Work for the Symphony by a Parts Relationship Type.


There is another Work entity ''[http://musicbrainz.org/work/288e78c4-20f6-3524-b599-1afaa0f1e4be 'Ode an die Freude' aus Sinfonie No. 9, Op. 125]'', and let's say it refers only to the part with the singing. It is linked to the IV. movement with a relationship, ... ''is a part of'' ''[http://musicbrainz.org/work/3761b925-82b2-3a61-9581-57751dee2e9e IV. Finale. Presto - Allegro assai]''.
There is another Work entity ''[[work:288e78c4-20f6-3524-b599-1afaa0f1e4be|'Ode an die Freude' aus Sinfonie No. 9, Op. 125]]'', and let's say it refers only to the part with the singing. It is linked to the IV. movement with a Relationship, ... "is a part of" ''[[work:3761b925-82b2-3a61-9581-57751dee2e9e|IV. Finale. Presto - Allegro assai]]''.


This structure is a '''work tree'''. It has six linked Work entities. They Symphony's entity is the '''root'''. The entities for Movements I-IV are '''children''' of the root. The entity for ''Ode an die Freude'' is a '''child''' of the entity for Movement IV.
This structure is a '''work tree'''. It consists of six linked Work entities. They Symphony's entity is the '''root'''. The entities for Movements I-IV are '''children''' of the root. The entity for ''Ode an die Freude'' is a '''child''' of the entity for Movement IV.


Let's say there is a [[Composer Relationship Type|Composer relationship]] of [http://musicbrainz.org/artist/1f9df192-a621-4f54-8850-2c5373b7eac9 Ludwig van Beethoven] to attached to the Root entity, ''[http://musicbrainz.org/work/c35b4956-d4f8-321a-865b-5b13d9ed192b Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 "Choral"]''. There is a [[Librettist Relationship Type|Librettist relationship]] of [http://musicbrainz.org/artist/6eea5386-1d69-424c-851c-1236a72db3c2 Friedrich Schiller] attached to ''[http://musicbrainz.org/work/3761b925-82b2-3a61-9581-57751dee2e9e IV. Finale. Presto - Allegro assai]''.
Let's say there is a [[Composer Relationship Type|Composer relationship]] of [[artist:1f9df192-a621-4f54-8850-2c5373b7eac9|Ludwig van Beethoven]] to attached to the Root entity, ''[[work:c35b4956-d4f8-321a-865b-5b13d9ed192b|Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 "Choral"]]''. There is a [[Librettist Relationship Type|Librettist relationship]] of [[artist:6eea5386-1d69-424c-851c-1236a72db3c2|Friedrich Schiller]] attached to ''[[work:3761b925-82b2-3a61-9581-57751dee2e9e|IV. Finale. Presto - Allegro assai]]''.


This structure conveys several meanings.
This structure conveys several meanings.
* Each of the four movements has Composer relationship with Beethoven, even though they have no direct Composer relationship defined (All of Child inherits from Parent).
* Each of the four movements has a Composer relationship with Beethoven, even though they have no direct Composer relationship defined (All of Child inherits from Parent).
* Beethoven is the Composer of every portion of every movement (All of Child inherits from Parent).
* Beethoven is the Composer of every portion of every movement (All of Child inherits from Parent).
* Schiller has the Librettist relationship with some portion, but maybe or maybe not all, of the overall ''Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 "Choral"'' (Some of Parent inherits from Child)
* Schiller has the Librettist relationship with some portion, but maybe or maybe not all, of the overall ''Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 "Choral"'' (Some of Parent inherits from Child).
* Schiller does not have the Librettist relationship with movements I, II, and III (Siblings don't inherit)
* Schiller does not have the Librettist relationship with movements I, II, and III (Siblings don't inherit).
* Schiller has the Librettist relationship with the excerpt, '' 'Ode an die Freude' aus Sinfonie No. 9, Op. 125'' (All of Child inherits from Parent).
* Schiller has the Librettist relationship with the excerpt, '' 'Ode an die Freude' aus Sinfonie No. 9, Op. 125'' (All of Child inherits from Parent).
* If the Librettist relationship with Schiller were attached to the overall ''Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 "Choral"'' instead of movement IV., then Schiller would have the Librettist relationship with movements I., II., and III. also (All of Child inherits from Parent). It turns out that these movements are entirely instrumental; they have no words. Whether it's meaningful for an instrumental movement to have a Librettist is a matter for [[Librettist Relationship Type]], not here.
* If the Librettist relationship with Schiller were attached to the overall ''Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 "Choral"'' instead of movement IV., then Schiller would have the Librettist relationship with movements I., II., and III. also (All of Child inherits from Parent). It turns out that these movements are entirely instrumental; they have no words. (Whether it's meaningful for an instrumental movement to have a Librettist is a matter for [[Librettist Relationship Type]] definition, not the inheritance rules.)
* The excerpt '' 'Ode an die Freude' aus Sinfonie No. 9, Op. 125'' has the Composer relationship with Beethoven (Inheritence is transitive).
* The excerpt '' 'Ode an die Freude' aus Sinfonie No. 9, Op. 125'' has the Composer relationship with Beethoven (Inheritance is transitive).
* If the Librettist relationship with Schiller were attached to the excerpt '' 'Ode an die Freude' aus Sinfonie No. 9, Op. 125'', instead of to movement IV., then the Librettist relationship with the overall ''Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 "Choral"'' would be unchanged: the Librettist relationship would be with some portion, but maybe or maybe not all, of the overall composition (Inheritence is transitive).
* If the Librettist relationship with Schiller were attached to the excerpt '' 'Ode an die Freude' aus Sinfonie No. 9, Op. 125'', instead of to movement IV., then the Librettist relationship with the overall ''Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 "Choral"'' would be unchanged: the Librettist relationship would be with some portion, but maybe or maybe not all, of the overall composition (Inheritence is transitive).


Without relationship inheritance, a search for [[Release]]s that had [[Recording]]s of performances of works composed by Beethoven wouldn't turn up many instances of the Symphony No. 9. Most Releases would put each movement of the symphony on a separate [[Track]], and each [[Track]] would link to a corresponding [[Recording]], and the [[Recording]] is most accurately linked to the child Work for the movement. But the Composer relationship for Beethoven is attached to the overall Symphony No. 9 work, not the child works for each movement. It is the relationship inheritance which connects the Release to the Composer, in this example.
Without relationship inheritance, a search for [[Release]]s that had [[Recording]]s of performances of works composed by Beethoven wouldn't turn up many instances of the Symphony No. 9. Most Releases would put each movement of the symphony on a separate [[Track]], and each [[Track]] would link to a corresponding [[Recording]], and the [[Recording]] is most accurately linked to the child Work for the movement. But the Composer relationship for Beethoven is attached to the overall Symphony No. 9 work, not the child works for each movement. It is the relationship inheritance which connects the Release to the Composer, in this example.

Latest revision as of 22:27, 28 August 2016


Status: This page describes an active style guideline proposal and is not official.



Proposal number: RFC-339
Champion: Jim DeLaHunt
Current status: RFC

RFC


MusicBrainz can represent metadata about musical compositions, and portions of those compositions, by using multiple Work entities linked together with "Parts" relationships. For instance, there is one Work entity for Beethoven's Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 "Choral", and one more for each of its movements (I., II., III., IV.). A "Parts" relationship indicates that each movement's Work is a part of the Symphony's Work.

This structure of linked Work entities is referred to as a Work Tree. Any Work entity which has a Relationship, "is part of" another Work entity, is a child Work. The linked Work, containing the Child, is a parent Work. Any Work which is not a Child is called the root of a Work Tree. The ancestors of a Work are the Work's Parent, and the Parent's Ancestors. Similarly, the descendants of a Work are the Work's Children, and each Child's Descendants.

Any Work which has no "Parts" relationships is a stand-alone Work entity, a very simple Work Tree with a Root and no Children. These inheritance rules may be applied to a Stand-Alone Work. They turn out to have no effect.

The MusicBrainz database represents the fact that a composer composed a musical work, by means of a Composer Relationship between the Artist entity for the composer and the Work entity for the composition. If this relationship is attached to the Work for a part of the composition, that has a different meaning than attaching it to the root Work. The Parts Relationship Type sets up inheritance between the parent and child Works, so that a Relationship attached to one of the Works conveys a meaning about the other. The same inheritance applies for almost all Relationships on Work entities, not just the Composer Relationship.

Relationship Inheritance Rules

Given two Work entities, which we'll call Parent and Child, with a Parts Relationship Type saying "Child is a part of Parent", then the meaning of relationships to either Work entity (which are not Parts Relationship Type themselves) is as follows:

Indivisibility
Any relationship to a Work entity applies to the all of the composition (or part of a composition) to which the Work refers, and to any portion of it. This applicability is called full coverage.
All of Child inherits from Parent
Any relationship to Parent, be it from an Artist, ReleaseGroup, Release, Label, URL, or Work (except for Work-Work Parts Relationship Type), means that the same relationship applies also to the entire portion of the musical composition to which Child refers (i.e., with full coverage).
Some of Parent inherits from Child
Any relationship to Child, be it from an Artist, ReleaseGroup, Release, Label, URL, or Work (except for Work-Work Parts Relationship Type), means that the same relationship applies to some non-zero portion, and maybe or maybe not all, of Parent. This applicability is called partial coverage.
Siblings don't inherit
Given another Work entity, Child 2, which also has a Parts Relationship Type saying "Child 2 is a part of Parent", then any relationship to Child does not imply any meaning about that relationship and Child 2. Inheritance passes between parent and child, but not from one child to another of the same parent.
Inheritance is transitive
Given yet another Work entity, Grandchild, which has a Parts Relationship Type saying "Grandchild is a part of Child", then any relationship which Child inherits from Parent, Grandchild in turn inherits from Child (its parent). Any relationship which Child inherits from Grandchild (its own child), Parent in turn inherits from Child.
Inheritance status matters
Anything which displays or interprets Relationships should present the distinction between inherited and direct Relationships, between inheritance from distant and immediately-linked relatives, and between full and partial coverage, in a way that's appropriate.

These rules cause inheritance for any Relationship Family between a Work and any other entity (Artist, ReleaseGroup, Release, Label, URL, or Work), except for the Parts Relationship Type (Work-Work). The Parts Relationship Type defines the parent-child structure, so it doesn't itself inherit.

Discussion

Software which reads the MusicBrainz database is what implements Relationship inheritance for a Work in a Work Tree. This software traverses the Parts Relationship Type links, and reports which Relationships affect the starting Work. Some Relationships will be attached directly to the Work, some will be inherited from ancestors, some will be inherited from descendants. Some Relationships will apply to the whole Work, some will apply to just some portion (and maybe or maybe not all) of it. As of October 2011, MusicBrainz software does not implement these inheritance rules. (However, it performs similar link traversals in other contexts, e.g. to get the Recording artists for a Work.)

The inheritance rules do not themselves dictate a Style guideline on where to apply Relationships to Works in a Work Tree. Until MusicBrainz software implements inheritance rules, a style of applying Relationships to the lowest Work in the tree has the advantage that current software is most likely to detect them. However, it requires multiple Relationships to be applied to multiple child Works in the tree, with a chance that they will accidentally be different, or that some Works will be missed. A style of applying Relationships to the highest Work in a tree, where they are still correct, has the advantage that relationships inherited to the lowest Works in the tree will be consistent and have complete coverage. It also has the advantage of lower data entry effort and lower storage requirements, though these are less important factors. However, until MusicBrainz software implements inheritance, the Relationships may be largely invisible.

It's completely valid to attach more than one Advanced Relationship of the same type to the same Work entity. For instance, the composition popularly known as the "Mozart Requiem" has Relationships to one composer (Mozart), one "additional" composer (Süßmayr), and three orchestrators (Mozart, Süßmayr, and Freystädtler). Also, MusicBrainz has no way to cancel or override Relationships. Thus, all the Relationships a Work inherits, or has directly attached, are valid. If there's a Work Tree where some Children need one Relationship "A", and other Children need a different relationship "B", then apply these Relationships to the Children. Do not apply either Relatioship, "A" or "B", to the Parent.

Why does inheritance status matter? For a Work entity, a directly attached Relationship has slightly different significance than the same exact Relationship inherited from an Ancestor. The meaning of the Relationship itself is the same: both have "full coverage", and link to the same other entity. But it's possible for editors to apply Relationships without realising how other Works in the Tree will inherit the Relationship. Also, Relationships inherited from Descendants have only partial coverage, while directly attached Relationships have full coverage. Because these differences are likely significant to users of MusicBrainz, they should be display in some appropriate way.

The definitions for ancestors and descendants above are recursive. This kind of definition works well for some people, and for mathematicians and computer scientists. It can be brain-twisting for many people. Here's another way to express those definitions. The Ancestors of a Work in a Work Tree are: that Work's Parent, the Parent's Parent, and so on back to the Root entity of the work tree. The Root Work itself has zero Ancestors. The Descendants of a Work in a Work Tree are: all of that Work's Children, and all of Children of the first Child, and all of Children of the second Child, and so on through all of the Work's Children, and all the Children's Children's Children, stopping at those final Works which themselves have no Children. Some Works in any Work Tree will have zero Children, and so zero Descendants.

Examples

Suppose there is one Work entity for Beethoven's Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 "Choral". (We're basing this example on actual MusicBrainz entries, with some embellishment.) There is one more Work entities for each of its movements (I..., II..., III..., and IV. Finale. Presto - Allegro assai). Each movement's Work is linked to the root Work for the Symphony by a Parts Relationship Type.

There is another Work entity 'Ode an die Freude' aus Sinfonie No. 9, Op. 125, and let's say it refers only to the part with the singing. It is linked to the IV. movement with a Relationship, ... "is a part of" IV. Finale. Presto - Allegro assai.

This structure is a work tree. It consists of six linked Work entities. They Symphony's entity is the root. The entities for Movements I-IV are children of the root. The entity for Ode an die Freude is a child of the entity for Movement IV.

Let's say there is a Composer relationship of Ludwig van Beethoven to attached to the Root entity, Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 "Choral". There is a Librettist relationship of Friedrich Schiller attached to IV. Finale. Presto - Allegro assai.

This structure conveys several meanings.

  • Each of the four movements has a Composer relationship with Beethoven, even though they have no direct Composer relationship defined (All of Child inherits from Parent).
  • Beethoven is the Composer of every portion of every movement (All of Child inherits from Parent).
  • Schiller has the Librettist relationship with some portion, but maybe or maybe not all, of the overall Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 "Choral" (Some of Parent inherits from Child).
  • Schiller does not have the Librettist relationship with movements I, II, and III (Siblings don't inherit).
  • Schiller has the Librettist relationship with the excerpt, 'Ode an die Freude' aus Sinfonie No. 9, Op. 125 (All of Child inherits from Parent).
  • If the Librettist relationship with Schiller were attached to the overall Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 "Choral" instead of movement IV., then Schiller would have the Librettist relationship with movements I., II., and III. also (All of Child inherits from Parent). It turns out that these movements are entirely instrumental; they have no words. (Whether it's meaningful for an instrumental movement to have a Librettist is a matter for Librettist Relationship Type definition, not the inheritance rules.)
  • The excerpt 'Ode an die Freude' aus Sinfonie No. 9, Op. 125 has the Composer relationship with Beethoven (Inheritance is transitive).
  • If the Librettist relationship with Schiller were attached to the excerpt 'Ode an die Freude' aus Sinfonie No. 9, Op. 125, instead of to movement IV., then the Librettist relationship with the overall Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 "Choral" would be unchanged: the Librettist relationship would be with some portion, but maybe or maybe not all, of the overall composition (Inheritence is transitive).

Without relationship inheritance, a search for Releases that had Recordings of performances of works composed by Beethoven wouldn't turn up many instances of the Symphony No. 9. Most Releases would put each movement of the symphony on a separate Track, and each Track would link to a corresponding Recording, and the Recording is most accurately linked to the child Work for the movement. But the Composer relationship for Beethoven is attached to the overall Symphony No. 9 work, not the child works for each movement. It is the relationship inheritance which connects the Release to the Composer, in this example.