>> An example is the second aria of Susanna in Mozart's `Le Nozze di >> Figaro', bar 16: >> >> f2 f8 e8 g8 c8 >> >> fin -- chè l'a -- "ria è an" -- cor >> >> Almost all singers I've met during my work as a coach have problems >> if they sing it the first time :-) > > That makes four vowels! i+a+e+a
Yes :-) Since this is completely unexpected (and I don't know any other work of Mozart with a similar situation), people are stumbling there. > Here http://cosinasdeleon.blogspot.com/2009/07/hinmo-leon.html are > two different instances of 'ioa' but they come from two words, not > three. First "-- gio~a" , then "Dio~a". No lyric ties either... Werner _______________________________________________ lilypond-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-devel
