Relationship types / Artist-Recording / Instrument arranger
Description
This indicates the artist who arranged a tune into a form suitable for performance. “Arrangement” is used as a catch-all term for all processes that turn a composition into a form that can be played by a specific type of ensemble.
ID: 158
Cardinality of {entity0}
: Many relationships (1)
Cardinality of {entity1}
: Few relationships (0)
Orderable direction: None (0)
UUID: 4820daa1-98d6-4f8b-aa4b-6895c5b79b27
Link phrases
- Forward link phrase: {additional:additionally} {associate} {instrument:%|instruments} {co:co-}arranged
- Reverse link phrase: {additional} {associate} {instrument:%|instruments} {co:co-}arranger
- Long link phrase: {additional:additionally} {associate} {co:co-}arranged {instrument:%|instruments} on
Attributes
The following attributes can be used with this relationship type:
additional
This attribute describes if a particular role was considered normal or additional.
associate
This typically indicates someone who is less experienced and who is working under the direction of someone who is more experienced.
co
Use this only for cases when someone is credited as co-[role] (co-producer, co-engineer, etc.) - which generally has a specific meaning that depends on the specific activity but is different from just "there were several people collaborating".
instrument
This attribute describes the possible instruments that can be captured as part of a performance.
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start date
end date
Guidelines
The start and end dates should be used to indicate when the arranger first started and last finished working on the arrangement.