I too don't remember seeing this notation before. Since the song is a Schubert lied, I wondered if it were an engraving technique peculiar to German or European work. I can't remember the publisher.

Dean
On Oct 25, 2004, at 12:05 AM, Christopher Smith wrote:


On Oct 25, 2004, at 2:57 AM, Johannes Gebauer wrote:

Christopher Smith wrote:
Is there something I missed in the original question that would mean that this doesn't apply? He can't possibly mean that there are two half note heads CONNECTED by sixteenth beams, can he? That seems completely weird to me.

Well, that's exactly what he means, and Karen's workaround is one which I myself have used in the passed. It's not at all complicated for what it does.





Wow, I guess one learns something new every day. I would find it complicated to READ, if not to notate, but then I'm not a pianist. I've never seen anything like this before.

Christopher

(who has also never seen slurs starting on the second of two tied notes, but didn't say anything so that he wouldn't look stupid. Too late! 8-) )

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Para m�, la m�sica es la respiraci�n de la vida y de Dios.
Per me, la musica � l'alito di vita e del Dio.
Pour moi, la musique est le souffle de la vie et de Dieu.
F�r mich ist Musik der Atem des Lebens und des Gottes.

Dean M. Estabrook
Director of Music
St. Andrew Presbyterian Church
Yuba City, CA


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