> Roman is actually quite correct here. If I may employ that apparently
hated tool of linguists and scholars, the dictionary;
>
> trans·lit·er·ate (trns-lt-rt, trnz-)
> tr.v. trans·lit·er·at·ed, trans·lit·er·at·ing, trans·lit·er·ates
>
>     To represent (letters or words) in the corresponding characters of
another alphabet.
>
> Roman's analogy was quite correct in explaining the differences between
tablature and staff notation, at
> least as far as it went given that, in simplest terms, staff notation
directly represents notes on a scale while tablature represents finger
positions on > a string for a specific instrument, in this case the lute.
But the alphabet analogy is quite apropos.
Thanks.
And it just occurred to me that there is another little aspect to staff
notation that makes it another form of tabulature. There is NO GRAPHIC
INDICATION in staff notation that there are semitones between  E and F or B
and C, and we are only aware of these semitones because of convention. In
other words the representation of the scale in notation is just as
meaningless in the abstract as any tabulature. Just a thought.......
RT




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