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Re: midi for orchestral scores
From: |
David Kastrup |
Subject: |
Re: midi for orchestral scores |
Date: |
Thu, 28 Jun 2012 14:01:30 +0200 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/24.1.50 (gnu/linux) |
Brett McCoy <address@hidden> writes:
> For a horn, I will have this for the notes:
>
> hornOneF = \transpose c g \relative c' {
> \global
>
> % Music follows here.
>
> ...
> }
[...]
> <<
> \new Voice = "horn 1" {
> \voiceOne
> \transpose g c
> \hornOneF
> }
It makes more sense to put
\transposition g'
into the horn part itself (but leave the \transpose c g for the horn
part in place). Then you don't need to retranspose the Midi afterwards:
it will be in sounding pitch anyway.
It also means that if you quote the horn part in other parts as a cue,
the cue will appear in the proper sounding pitch rather than in the
horn's transposition.
\transposition does not change the output at the place it is written: it
only affects the interpretation if you use it in Midi or quote it
elsewhere.
--
David Kastrup
- midi for orchestral scores, Shevek, 2012/06/27
- Re: midi for orchestral scores, Nils, 2012/06/28
- Re: midi for orchestral scores, Jan Nieuwenhuizen, 2012/06/28
- Re: midi for orchestral scores, Ralf Mattes, 2012/06/28
- Re: midi for orchestral scores, Shevek, 2012/06/28
- Re: midi for orchestral scores, ArnoldTheresius, 2012/06/29