I'm looking for two special noteheads: 1. An (open) accent-shaped notehead with both up-stems and down-stems centered horizontally on the glyph
2. A solid, downward-pointing equilateral triangle notehead, again with both up-stems and down-stems centered horizontally on the glyph I'd like to get hold of the first symbol for lip-pizzicati on the flute and the second for tongue-rams, also on the flute. (If the descriptions confuse rather than help, then I can scan some small bits of actual music. Ferneyhough's "Cassandra's Dream Song" (1970) and Yuasa's "Terms of Temporal Detailing" (1991) have good examples of the first symbol; the second symbol is Sciarrino's usual notation for tongue-rams. Good explanations -- with notation examples -- appear in Carin Levine's "The Techniques of Flute Playing / Die Spieltechnik der Flöte" (2002, Bärenreiter-Verlag; two volumes), which is a great source of information for absolutely everything about the flutes.) 8.4.5 "Special noteheads" mentions neither shape, but I wanted to make sure before requesting the feature. The upward-pointing triangle notehead given in 8.5.4 "Shape note heads" would work for #2 if I could get it reflected about the y-axis (ie, downward-pointing instead of upward-pointing). So is there a secret accent-shaped notehead sitting around somewhere? Or a downward-pointing solid triangle notehead? Also, if any other composers out there are happily using other notations for either lip-pizz or tongue-ram in Lily, I'd be interested in hearing about those solutions, too. -- Trevor Bača [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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