metabrainz-sphinx-rtd-poc-2 documentation

This is the main page for the metabrainz-sphinx-rtd-poc-2 documentation. Other pages are available for you to navigate and explore below. For more information, see the repo on GitHub.

-i https://pypi.org/simple alabaster==0.7.12 babel==2.7.0 certifi==2019.9.11 chardet==3.0.4 commonmark==0.9.0 docutils==0.15.2 future==0.17.1 idna==2.8 imagesize==1.1.0 jinja2==2.10.1 markupsafe==1.1.1 packaging==19.2 pygments==2.4.2 pyparsing==2.4.2 pytz==2019.2 recommonmark==0.6.0 requests==2.22.0 six==1.12.0 snowballstemmer==1.9.1 sphinx-rtd-theme==0.4.3 sphinx==2.2.0 sphinxcontrib-applehelp==1.0.1 sphinxcontrib-devhelp==1.0.1 sphinxcontrib-htmlhelp==1.0.2 sphinxcontrib-jsmath==1.0.1 sphinxcontrib-qthelp==1.0.2 sphinxcontrib-serializinghtml==1.1.3 urllib3==1.25.5

Name

The artist name is the official name of an artist, whether it is a person, band, or character. In most cases, it is the name as found on releases.

Note that you can change how an artist is credited on a release or track when you enter that release. There is usually no need to add a new artist to the database if the artist is already present in our database under a (slightly) different name.

Keep in mind MusicBrainz is an international site, and “official name” doesn’t necessarily mean “most common English name”. For example, the “official name” for the Japanese composer Tōru Takemitsu is “武満徹”, not “Tōru Takemitsu” (which is the primary English alias instead).

Definite articles and titles

Only include definite articles (like “The”, “El” or “Der”) and honorary titles (like “Sir” or “MBE”) if they’re actually used by the artist as part of its name. If it’s not clear, leave them out, and just add them to the artist credit when printed.

Sort name

See the guideline for sort names.

Disambiguation comment

Disambiguation comments should be short but informative. See more at Disambiguation Comment.

Area

Main area

For people, use the country where they were born and raised. For groups, use the country where the band was formed. For characters, use the country where the character was created. If the artist is predominantly active in a different country, use that country instead.

If an artist is most commonly associated with an area smaller than a country, select that instead.

Begin and end area

Use as precise an area as you can (city or region are better than just country). Remember for people this means birth and death locations, rather than where they started their career.

Gender

Use the gender the artist identifies as. Use “other” if the artist identifies as something other than “male” or “female”.

For characters, the fictional gender of the character should be used. This might not match the gender of a person who performed the character.

The “other” gender option is meant to represent a gender that is neither male nor female, and is not intended for use with entities for which the concept of gender is illogical, such as companies.

Aliases

See the guidelines for aliases.

Indices and tables