agreed, octave transposition is what i call it - the notation is
transposed
d
On 27 Feb 2008, at 16:37, Anh Hai Trinh wrote:
On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 10:04:35 -0500, Kieren MacMillan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
Hi Eyolf,
Or one might turn the argument around and say that the melody is
indeed
trans-posed -- placed somewhere else, whereas the negative
associations
of dis- is that it's ended up in the wrong place...
Interesting point...
Really, what we're talking about is a NOTATIONAL SHORTHAND: the
notes in question aren't actually TRANSPOSED or DISPLACED, just
like notes in a "treble_8" clef are neither TRANSPOSED nor
DISPLACED: they are simply NOTATED using a different (shorthand)
method.
I think you are mistaken here, a concert A written in any clef would
sound with f = 440Hz, whereas a written concert A with a 8va bracket
would sound with f = 880Hz. Anything sounding at a different
interval than what is notated is called transposition in
orchestration books. I believe the correct term, if there need be
one, would be "octave transposition".
--AT
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