Thanks, Andreas, for the link to that resource. Very helpful for readin all sorts of tablature. I don't think it is the same ornament, but it's meaning is probably similar, i.e. some form of arpeggio or slide\schleiffer. In L 27 Seger writes the same ornament between the two staves, perhaps meaning one arpeggio over both chords instead of each chord it's own arpeggio. Anyway, I'm not sure, but rendering it as arpeggio or with grace-niotes is easier than try and emulate the exact form of the ornament :-).

And yes, I'm the one with the Youtube organ channel. Liardon's Triosonata was a great work to perform. Too bad it was left unfinished.

Regards,
Auke

Op 24-2-2024 om 09:14 schreef samarutuk:
Hello Auke,

perhaps it is the ornament in the appendix, even if it is above the note in this example. I found it on IMSLP in Johannes Wolf's "Handbuch für Notationskunde", Volume 2 (https://vmirror.imslp.org/files/imglnks/usimg/f/f8/IMSLP459872-PMLP747010-handbuchdernotat02wolf.pdf).

Regards
Andreas

P.S. Are you the one with the Youtube organ channel? I discovered you at some point while searching for Gaël Liardon. Very nice that you have recorded some of his work (especially the Trio en sol majeur).


Am 19.02.2024 um 19:28 schrieb Engraver:

This is a screenshot of the entire page.



Op 19-2-2024 om 19:25 schreef Stefan Thomas:
Dear Auke,
I don't know this ornament either but maybe it could be useful to see a few bars more of this music.
Best,
Stefan


Hallo,
    I'm transcribing the organ music of Josef Ferdinand Norbert
    Seger. The prelude I'm currently working on, shows an
    ornamentation I am not familiar with. See screenshot. I think it
    is probably meant as arpeggio, but I'm not sure. Does anyone
know for sure what it is? Regards, Auke


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