I am no help when it comes to style. In my opinion quotes only make sense in the context of a narrative. More importantly . . . who, what, where and when were these fiddlers recorded! Paul Trey Bunn <[log in to unmask]> wrote: Here's an odd one for you. I've completed a finding aid at the archives where I work, and it references 24 reel tapes of field recordings of fiddler players. For each tape, I've done a track listing, a small excerpt of which looks like this: 1. Little Lucy 2. Gathering Flowers from the Hillside 3. Allgood Special ...and so on. However, my supervisor wants me to redo the track listings with quotation marks around the song titles. I can't recall ever seeing a track listing done with quotation marks, and this just seems wrong. 1. "Little Lucy" 2. "Gathering Flowers from the Hillside" 3. "Allgood Special" I don't have my Little Brown Handbook handy, but I've usually got very good grammar instincts, and that list just looks wrong to me. I know some of you have worked on discographies before, so I thought I'd check for some opinions on the listserv. Of course, it could just be company policy where I work to do finding aids like this, that is, with awkward-looking quotation marks on song titles, but it might have been helpful had I been told that thirteen pages ago. Anyway, any thoughts? Trey Bunn