Classical Music Initiativeā„¢

Gracenote standardizes Classical music information.

Gracenote's Classical Music Initiative™ (CMI™) presents all of the key information about an individual classical music track accurately within the standards for consumer electronic device application displays.

CMI resolves a longstanding dilemma in digital music. The challenge is that most music management software and hardware devices display three lines of text for the album title, song name, and recording artist, while recorded music information in the classical and opera categories rarely fits into three text fields. Classical tracks require more space for work titles, composers, conductors, soloists, and ensembles.

Gracenote developed a way to display the performing artist, album title, track title, and composer, while satisfying the limitations of the information displays. The Classical Music Initiative depends on the work of Gracenote classical music editors as well as automated data transformation methods. The editors use Gracenote's Composition Database and waveform fingerprints to review for internal matches.

Editorial Process

Automated Process

Data feeds from content partners

Support from the Classical Music Community

Gracenote CMI has been endorsed by classical artists, critics, customers, and experts, including the London Symphony Orchestra, the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra and the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra. Other endorsers include music labels Harmonia-Mundi and Naxos and top classical music authors and scholars.

Worldwide classical coverage

Gracenote has converted more than tens of thousands of the top classical music albums into the CMI format representing half of all classical music lookup queries on the Gracenote service in the last 12 months. The number of CMI-formatted albums grows each day using data feeds directly from labels, artists and other content sources and matches those against our Classical Works database to transform the data into the CMI standard.