University Mozarteum Salzburg (Universität Mozarteum)
Main Library
The collection policy of the Mozarteum University Library is orientated towards the spectrum of subjects taught at the university: music, theatre and fine arts. With a total collection of more than 300,000 media, our university library is one of the largest public music and art libraries in Austria. It is the perfect place to dive into the past and develop visions for the future. Whether you are a student, a doctoral candidate, or a teacher – our collections offer everything you need for everyday university life and beyond.
Address: Mirabellplatz 1, 5020 Salzburg
Opening hours: Closed during the congress
E-Mail: bibliothek@moz.ac.at
Website: https://www.moz.ac.at/de/studium/universitaetsbibliothek
Tour for attendees of the IAML Congress by arrangement, contact: barbara.raminger@moz.ac.at
Orff Institute Library
The institute is particularly committed to the scholarly and artistic development of music and dance education, and has set itself the task of keeping alive the tradition of the Orff Schulwerk, including documenting it and developing it further. The Orff Institute is a place of research-led teaching and the center of a worldwide network of music and dance education.
Address: Frohnburgweg 55, 5020 Salzburg
Opening hours: Monday to Friday 9–16
Game Research & Playing Arts Archive
Literature on all aspects of playing and gaming. Ca. 3000 prints from four centuries with game & play motifs. Collection of historical games and game instructions.
Address: Schwarzstrasse 24, 5020 Salzburg
Opening hours: by arrangement, contact: rainer.buland@moz.ac.at
Tour for attendees of the IAML Congress: Thursday, 10 July, 18:00 (max. 12 participants, please register at the Information Desk, Unipark Nonntal)



University Library Salzburg
UNIPARK Branch Library
The UNIPARK branch library is part of the University Library Salzburg. It was opened in October 2011 and it is one of the university library’s most modern locations. On an area of 4000 m², spread over 3 levels, it provides its users with around 470,000 media from subjects in the cultural and social sciences including the musicology department.
Address: Erzabt-Klotz-Straße 1 (Unipark Nonntal), 5020 Salzburg
Opening hours: Monday to Thursday 8:30–20:00, Friday 8:30–18:00
E-mail (Agnes Brunnauer): agnes.brunnauer@plus.ac.at
Tel.: +43 662 8044 4920
Website: https://www.plus.ac.at/universitaetsbibliothek/standorte-infrastruktur/teilbibliotheken/unipark/
Derra de Moroda Dance Archives (DdMDA)
The Derra de Moroda Dance Archives (DdMDA) originated from the private research library and dance collection of Friderica Derra de Moroda (1897–1978), a dancer, dance teacher and publicist who donated them to the University of Salzburg in 1978. Themes covered include dance treatises, dance technique and notation, 19th-century ballet, the Ballets Russes, Central European “Ausdruckstanz”, national and social dance, as well as ballet and the ‚ballet reform‘ of the 18th century.
Since the donation, the DdMDA has been continuously expanded with academic literature and now consists of thousands of items relating to dance and related fields such as music, theatre, costume, scenography, fashion, folklore and cultural history. The archive also includes Derra de Moroda‘s personal estate.
Address: Erzabt-Klotz-Straße 1 (Unipark Nonntal), 5020 Salzburg
Opening hours: Tuesday and Wednesday, 9–12, or by appointment
E-Mail (Irene Brandenburg): irene.brandenburg@plus.ac.at
Website: https://ddmarchiv.eu/en/en-home/
Tours for attendees of the IAML Congress: Tuesday, 8 July, 12:45–13:15 and Friday, 11 July, 12:45–13:15 (please register at the Information Desk, Unipark Nonntal)
International Mozarteum Foundation (Internationale Stiftung Mozarteum)
Bibliotheca Mozartiana
The world’s largest specialized library on Wolfgang Amadé Mozart and his family. The historical holdings go back to gifts from Mozart’s widow and his sons (letters, documents and music autographs, historical prints). The library also contains historical holdings of the “Dommusikverein” and the “Mozarteum” Conservatory, founded in 1841 (until 1922).
Address: Schwarzstrasse 26 (2nd floor), 5020 Salzburg
Opening hours: Monday to Friday 9–13 and 14–17
E-Mail: bibliothek@mozarteum.at
Telephone: +43 662 88940 13 or 14
Website: https://bibliothek.mozarteum.at/
Tours for attendees of the IAML Congress:
Monday, 7 July, 18–18:30 and Thursday, 10 July, 18–18:30 (please register at the Information Desk, Unipark Nonntal)
Mozart Audio-Visual Collection (Mozart Ton- und Film-Sammlung)
Opened in 1991 in the Mozart Residence, the Mozart Audio-Visual Collection is the largest specialized archive of sound and visual recordings of Mozart’s life and works. The collection includes 35,000 sound recordings (the oldest dates back to 1889) and 5,000 video productions. It is possible to listen to recordings or watch films directly in the archive. For individual works, more than 300 different interpretations are available. Another 12,000 recordings are documented in the collection’s online database. The collection itself includes numerous performances of works, rehearsal excerpts, documentaries, feature films, plays, and children’s films.
Address: Makartplatz 8 (Mozart residence), 5020 Salzburg
Opening hours: Monday, Tuesday and Friday 9–13, Wednesday and Thursday 13–17
E-Mail (Stephanie Krenner): krenner@mozarteum.at
Telephone: +43 (0) 662 883 454 81
Website: https://dme.mozarteum.at/opac-mtfs/
Tours for attendees of the IAML Congress: Wednesday, 9 July, 13–13:30, and Thursday, 10 July, 13–13:30 (please register at the Information Desk, Unipark Nonntal)


Salzburg Festival Archive
The Salzburg Festival’s Archive is among the most important theatre archives existing in Austria. As an archive, collection and library hybrid, it preserves a vast trove of documentation of the Festival’s history. Its holdings (photographs, publications, sketches, posters, scores and performance material, documents, letters etc.) are continuously expanded. Artistic projects involving the archive seek to convey this cultural heritage in a vibrant manner.
Address: Neutorstraße 25, 5020 Salzburg
Opening hours: Tuesdays & Thursdays 10–16
E-Mail: archiv@salzburgfestival.at
Telephone: +43 662 8045 492
Website: https://www.salzburgerfestspiele.at/en/festivalarchive
Archive of the Salzburg Folk Song Society (Archiv des Salzburger Volksliedwerkes)
Since its foundation as the ‘Working Committee for Folk Song in Salzburg’ in 1908, the Archive of the Salzburger Volksliedwerk/Salzburg folk song society has been collecting regional folk songs and folk music. The holdings range from historical handwritten songbooks to transcriptions and field recordings by former folk song collectors to materials and results from modern-day field research.
Address: Haus der Volkskulturen, Zugallistraße 10, 5020 Salzburg
Opening hours: Monday to Thursday 9–12 and 13–16, Research on request
E-Mail: volksliedwerk@salzburg.gv.at
Telephone: +43 662 8042 2990
Website: www.salzburgervolksliedwerk.at, / https://archiv.salzburgervolkskultur.at


Archive of the Archdiocese of Salzburg (Archiv der Erzdiözese Salzburg)
The Archive of the Archdiocese of Salzburg is one of the most modern archives in Austria situated in a historic building. Amongst many historic sources it houses the beautifully preserved music collection of Salzburg Cathedral. It is also the place where the Salzburg RISM Working Group was founded in 2007.
Address: Kapitelplatz 3, 5020 Salzburg
Opening hours: Tuesday to Thursday 9–12 and 13–17
E-Mail (Eva Neumayr): eva.neumayr@eds.at
Telephone: +43 662 8047 1513
Website: www.eds.at/archiv
Tour for attendees of the IAML Congress: Tuesday, 8 July, 13–13:45 (please register at the Information Desk, Unipark Nonntal)