Crystal Premo wrote:
On a lead sheet on which A and B sections are defined by enclosed "A"'s and "B"'s, with a double bar at the ends of the sections. All sections begin at the beginning of a line, and my client has marked those sections to also begin with a double bar. Is this usual?
Crystal Premo [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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I have seen manuscript that looks like that. Is it usual? No. Is it possible? Yes. Does the client want it? Then do it.
Ask the client about it and see what he/she wants -- explain that such a setup isn't necessary because the A and B will be what people are looking for, not the double bar.
Clint Roemer, in The Art of Music Copying (which is aimed more at the jazz copyist than the classical copyist) shows a number of samples which have double bars at the beginning of staves.
There's no reason not to begin with a double-bar if the client wants it.
-- David H. Bailey [EMAIL PROTECTED] _______________________________________________ Finale mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.shsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/finale
