Elie,

Thank you for your suggestions to overcome the difficulties I mentioned.

The picture of the oriscus auctus comes from the antiphon Cumque vidisset 
ventum 
from the 2010 Antiphonale Romanum (AR 307). The oriscus auctus does appear a 
couple of times in the newest chant books by Solesmes. As I am browsing, I also 
see it for example in the antiphon Simile est enim (AR 304).

By the way, the fact that you thought that the picture from a Solesmes book 
looked like Gregorio tells me that Gregorio's standards are pretty high...

Steven



________________________________
From: Elie Roux <[email protected]>
To: Steven van Roode <[email protected]>
Cc: gregorio-users <[email protected]>
Sent: Sun, August 8, 2010 10:20:51 AM
Subject: Re: [Gregorio-users] tests

Steven van Roode a écrit :
> Here's a wish I could think of: this "oriscus with diminutive liquescentia" 
> or 
>"oriscus auctum" (see attached picture – I really wonder how such a note is 
>called).

I'll do it soon (today normally), but I have just one question for curiosity: 
where does the picture come from? The typesetting looks like gregorio and the 
oriscus auctus glyph seems to come from lilypond... not a very wise mix...

Thank you,
-- Elie



      
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