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Re: Transpose
From: |
address@hidden |
Subject: |
Re: Transpose |
Date: |
Sat, 7 Sep 2019 17:23:38 +0000 (GMT) |
Hi John,
I suspect you'll have to write out your pattern in C major and then A minor
first, and then transpose the pair all the way through the other keys. Be
aware that you should be able to use '\key c \major' for the C maj. and A min.
pattern.
Hope this helps,
David
----- Original Message -----
> From: "John McWilliam" <address@hidden>
> To: "Lillypond Users Mailing List" <address@hidden>
> Sent: Saturday, September 7, 2019 4:52:22 PM
> Subject: Transpose
> Hi,
>
> I am rewriting Baermanns repetitive exercises for clarinet and am trying to
> rationalise my code. For example broken chords: they start in C major then A
> minor followed by G major, E minor etc. To avoid rewriting the code every time
> I tried using ”\transpose c a \Cmajor” (the variable with the C major code).
> This gave me of coarse a change of key signature to A major – not what was
> wanted. Is there a way around this which will allow me to take the C major
> code
> and transpose the notes down a third to A keeping everything in C (minor).
>
>
>
> John McWilliam
>
>
>
> Sent from [ https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986 | Mail ] for
> Windows
> 10
>
>
>
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- Transpose, John McWilliam, 2019/09/07
- Re: Transpose,
address@hidden <=
- Re: Transpose, David Kastrup, 2019/09/07
- RE: Transpose, John McWilliam, 2019/09/10
- Re: Transpose, David Wright, 2019/09/10
- RE: Transpose, John McWilliam, 2019/09/10
- RE: Transpose, foxfanfare, 2019/09/10
- Re: Transpose, David Wright, 2019/09/11
- RE: Transpose, John McWilliam, 2019/09/11
- Re: Transpose, David Wright, 2019/09/11
- Re: Transpose, Gilles Thibault, 2019/09/16
- Re: Transpose, Pierre Perol-Schneider, 2019/09/16