Excerpts from David Rogers's message of Mon Mar 14 16:11:47 +0000 2011: > In my opinion, for starters, any new system that requires an explanation > of its features is out. If it isn't obvious without explanation, then > the advantages are probably not great enough to get anybody to switch.
:) Of course you all are right. Getting trained on music system takes effort and time. So nobody knowing it will switch. But you got the point: Its not obvious why e-f is a semitone having the same visual appearance as let's say c-d. You have to explain that. You have to learn it. You have to pay attention to it if you're playing two voices one written in Es, the other in C... The last is the main point. My mother started playing the Saxophone (Es). The other instruments we have at home are Xaphoone's (C,As). So there is no choice: Either we have to rewrite notes or transpose on the fly (which means one is waiting for the other). http://musicnotation.org/musicnotations/gallery.html The link is fine. And its crazy to see how many different systems have been tried. However they all are base don the e-f semi step. I feel that some people playing music only once a year would benefit from equal appearance meaning equal intervals. This would help them recognize intervals faster etc. I know that there is no way rewriting traditional music. There is too much available. I still think it should be easier for untrained people to get started with music. That's all. Marc Weber _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user