Oddly enough, when I compile the main file you sent me, I see the clef, but not the neumes (kind of the opposite of what you got). Further, looking at your processed score (alleluiaEas5C.tex) I see that the \gresetinitialclef command is right where it should be. Finally, if I process both the gabc file and the main file, then I see everything. As a result, here's my best (and really only) guess as to what's happening:

Élie is in the process of shifting the Unicode points of the fonts which contain the the neumes (and presumably the clefs) as they were originally placed in a range which overlapped with control points (a no-no according to the Unicode standards). It may be that in shifting the neumes around, the clefs somehow didn't get shifted in the same way and thus the \gresetinitialclef command points to an empty glyph.

However, if this was the case, then I would have expected other people who were using the svn to install to see the same problem. The commit that made the shift was made May 4th. Anyone who installed from svn since then should have seen the problem. However, you're the first to report this problem so I'm not sure I'm right. Élie would have a much better idea as to whether my guess has any grounding.

If it is the problem, then it should be fixable by installing a version of Gregorio which doesn't include the font shift. If you're willing to go this route, try downloading and installing 2.4.0rc from the repository. You can check it out from the svn with the command:

svn co svn://svn.gna.org/svn/gregorio/branches/2.4.0rc


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Br. Samuel, OSB
(R. Padraic Springuel)

PAX ☧ ΧΡΙΣΤΟΣ

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