Question Author
Buenchico: Hi again!
Just for the record: I think capitalising every first letter of words in a title is a very good idea. A bit like the idiotic uneven calendar we have (which Dave Gorman sorted out on his TV show, to great comedic effect), so also the archaic rules we have for using capitals only on some words, while all others are in lower case. It makes far more sense to capitalise the first letter of every word in titles. If you use the record selling service Discogs, and more importantly, if you contribute to their database (it is a publicly sourced information database, from anywhere in the world), they made the decision that in order to get precise information on song and album titles and artiste names from people whose first language is not necessarily English, rather than try to teach people the convoluted and rather capricious rules of which words got capitals and which didn't, it made more sense to just capitalise every word and name and throw away the antiquated book of rules. It works better than if they just let people make it up as they went along, and although it's not perfect, if you don't adhere to their method, your entry or update will be rejected with a message to tell you what you've done wrong. I've grown so used to that way of doing things that I do it automatically with titles and names everywhere (eg. If I Had A Hammer, Gerry And The Pacemakers, Van Der Graaf Generator, Newcastle Upon Tyne, etc). So at least this simplifies a very finicky rule, and Discogs' database is a beacon of commonsense, and is reliable and mostly unambiguous. TAB would do well to emulate this levelling of the playing field.