Hi, this is my first post in this list and I am new to lilypond, which by the way is a great piece of software! Anyway I hope this mail doesn't become off-topic.
On Mon, 5 Jan 2004 17:48:06 +0100, Han-Wen Nienhuys wrote: > Just yesterday, a Jazz musician explained to me that it is the > classical musicians that need to read everything from paper, while for > the modern musicians, paper is just a simple reminder and often is a > hindrance for getting a good performance . Given the complexities of a > modern symphonic orchestral part relative to a Jazz parts, I tend to > agree that ease of (sight-)reading is much more important for > classical music. I (lousily) play both classical and jazz music, so I hear these kinds of arguments often :-). First off, there are complex classical-like jazz parts too, namely in big bands but not only. Anyway, I guess we're talking mostly about realbook-like one-page parts, standards and such so I will only talk about these from here on. So, you say ease of reading is more important in classical music. I disagree, I think it's important for both albeit in different ways. As a rhythm section player, who usually doesn't read the melody, only the chords, I find it _very_ important to have 4 bars per line (the more their widths are alike the better), readable chords (extensions and all), and clear distinction between the sections of the music (eg: in a standard in AABA form) particularly if you're playing the tune for the first time in a fast tempo :-) For me, this is obviously more important than the readability of melody. > If you think that LilyPond output is lacking in terms of readability, > then we should focus on improving that. OTOH, I find it hard to > believe that there are any music fonts out there that look bolder and > more articulated than feta. Speaking of melody, most realbook tunes are quite simple, some even boring, (I think that is why most people play the melodies with different rhythm, different notes even, sometimes no melody is played at all) and perhaps that is why they look odd with classical music fonts. I scanned some leadsheets from books I have to illustrate some of my points, I'm not sure which are doable with lilypond right which aren't. The images are a bit large, sorry. 1. <http://ajxoj.ath.cx/stuff/musicscans/brightsizelife.png> [509k] 2. <http://ajxoj.ath.cx/stuff/musicscans/brooklyn.png> [626k] 3. <http://ajxoj.ath.cx/stuff/musicscans/voailza.png> [362k] These come frome "The Pat Metheny Songbook", "Inside the Brazilian Rhythm Section", and "Tudo e' som" respectively. 4. <http://ajxoj.ath.cx/stuff/musicscans/summertime.png> [362k] This last one comes from "The New Real Book". So, the first two use the style mentioned by the OP, and the third a similar one. It looks nice for this kind of music, although the chords aren't the easiest to read. The last one has a more classic look and is probably my favourite in terms of easiness to read. The chords are extremely legible and all lines have 4 bars. I would guess much of this is already possible with lilypond, no? -- Luis Oliveira Lisp is the red pill. http://student.dei.uc.pt/~lmoliv/ -- John Fraser, comp.lang.lisp Equipa Portuguesa do Translation Project http://www2.iro.umontreal.ca/~pinard/po/registry.cgi?team=pt _______________________________________________ Lilypond-devel mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-devel
