Re: How to transpose?

2024-05-27 Thread Wols Lists
On 25/05/2024 18:44, bobr...@centrum.is wrote: Wol, The bit about trombones in bass and Bb treble; I've only ever heard of Bb treble clef trombone in British brass band music.  What is the "American bass part" in Bb?  I've never heard of such a thing.  I know that Richard Strauß wrote tenor

Re: How to transpose?

2024-05-25 Thread bobr...@centrum.is
d > From: "Wols Lists" > To: "Lillypond Users Mailing List" > Sent: Friday, May 24, 2024 3:28:16 PM > Subject: Re: How to transpose? > On 23/05/2024 12:26, Kenneth Flak wrote: > > Great, thanks to both of you! Very clarifying. \transposition is, thus, &

Re: How to transpose?

2024-05-25 Thread Kenneth Flak
Wols Lists, May 24, 2024 at 18:28: > I do a lot of brass stuff. And as you've realised, it's \transpose not > \transposition. > > I just think "\transpose for printed music, \transposition for midi". > How accurate that is I don't know. > > The other trick I always use (given that a trombone plays

Re: How to transpose?

2024-05-24 Thread Wols Lists
On 23/05/2024 12:26, Kenneth Flak wrote: Great, thanks to both of you! Very clarifying. \transposition is, thus, going in the direction of instrument -> playback, whereas \transpose goes in the opposite direction, if I understand it correctly. I do a lot of brass stuff. And as you've realised,

Re: How to transpose?

2024-05-23 Thread David Kastrup
Kenneth Flak writes: > Great, thanks to both of you! Very clarifying. \transposition is, thus, > going in the direction of instrument -> playback, More like display pitch -> concert pitch. > whereas \transpose goes in the opposite direction, if I understand it > correctly. \transpose changes

Re: How to transpose?

2024-05-23 Thread Kenneth Flak
Timothy Lanfear, May 23, 2024 at 13:19: > If you already have the music written in concert pitch, use the > transpose > function to change displayed pitch. > > \transpose bes, c { \clef treble \key c\major g' } > > If your brass players prefer not to have a key signature, omit the \key >

Re: How to transpose?

2024-05-23 Thread Timothy Lanfear
necessary to enter the notes at displayed pitch as shown in the example. -David *From: *"Kenneth Flak" *To: *"Lillypond Users Mailing List" *Sent: *Thursday, May 23, 2024 6:55:45 AM *Subjec

Re: How to transpose?

2024-05-23 Thread bobr...@centrum.is
23, 2024 6:55:45 AM > Subject: How to transpose? > Hi, > Trying my hands on transposing from concert pitch to Trumpet in Bf and french > horn in F, but the displayed notes are still in concert pitch... How do I make > these display the notes I would like the players to see? >

How to transpose?

2024-05-23 Thread Kenneth Flak
Hi, Trying my hands on transposing from concert pitch to Trumpet in Bf and french horn in F, but the displayed notes are still in concert pitch... How do I make these display the notes I would like the players to see? \new Staff = "trumpet" \with { instrumentName = "Trp" } {

Re: How to transpose an entire piece of music?

2015-12-23 Thread Kieren MacMillan
Hi Bernhard, > When I searched for Lilypond transponieren (transpose) I was not at all > clear that this could be done on an entire piece. There is no example > where score is mentioned. While it doesn’t explicitly say “score”, it does [at least on the English site] say: “Consider a piece

Re: How to transpose an entire piece of music?

2015-12-23 Thread Bernhard Kleine
Hi Kieren, > >> I looked in the docu, but could not find it. >> Maybe I should be added. > > Does > > not document this feature fully and/or well enough? If not, please explain > how to improve

Re: How to transpose an entire piece of music?

2015-12-23 Thread Wols Lists
On 23/12/15 15:02, Kieren MacMillan wrote: > Hi Bernhard, > >> > When I searched for Lilypond transponieren (transpose) I was not at all >> > clear that this could be done on an entire piece. There is no example >> > where score is mentioned. > While it doesn’t explicitly say “score”, it does [at

Re: How to transpose an entire piece of music?

2015-12-23 Thread Bernhard Kleine
Am 23.12.2015 um 16:02 schrieb Kieren MacMillan: > Hi Bernhard, > >> When I searched for Lilypond transponieren (transpose) I was not at all >> clear that this could be done on an entire piece. There is no example >> where score is mentioned. > > While it doesn’t explicitly say “score”, it

Re: How to transpose an entire piece of music?

2015-12-23 Thread Kieren MacMillan
Hi Bernhard, > I looked in the docu, but could not find it. > Maybe I should be added. Does not document this feature fully and/or well enough? If not, please explain how to improve this

How to transpose an entire piece of music?

2015-12-22 Thread Bernhard Kleine
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA256 I had a christmas carol "Zu Bethelem geboren" with is in F-Dur. That piece has a bass voice going to "großem F" more than once. Since the other voice are not at all at their upper limit, I thought to transpose the carol by 1 or 2 tones to G-Dur or

Re: How to transpose an entire piece of music?

2015-12-22 Thread Simon Albrecht
On 22.12.2015 22:04, Bernhard Kleine wrote: -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA256 I had a christmas carol "Zu Bethlehem geboren" with is in F-Dur. That piece has a bass voice going to "großem F" more than once. Since the other voice are not at all at their upper limit, I thought to

Re: How to transpose an entire piece of music?

2015-12-22 Thread Colin Campbell
On 15-12-22 02:04 PM, Bernhard Kleine wrote: -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA256 I had a christmas carol "Zu Bethelem geboren" with is in F-Dur. That piece has a bass voice going to "großem F" more than once. Since the other voice are not at all at their upper limit, I thought to

Re: How to transpose an entire piece of music?

2015-12-22 Thread Noeck
Hi Bernhard, please post complete tiny examples here. Your first one is not complete and the latter one is at least missing the content of \global. This should bring you closer to what you want: \version "2.19.21" \language deutsch soprano = \transpose f a { \key f \major \partial 4

Re: How to transpose an entire piece of music?

2015-12-22 Thread Bernhard Kleine
Am 22.12.2015 um 22:16 schrieb Simon Albrecht: > > > On 22.12.2015 22:04, Bernhard Kleine wrote: >> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- >> Hash: SHA256 >> >> I had a christmas carol "Zu Bethlehem geboren" with is in F-Dur. That >> piece has a bass voice going to "großem F" more than once. Since

Re: How to transpose a custom slur

2013-12-21 Thread Marten Visser
Hi David, David Nalesnik david.nalesnik at gmail.com writes: Hi again, On Fri, Dec 20, 2013 at 6:08 PM, David Nalesnik david.nalesnik at gmail.com wrote: Sorry, goofed the syntax...  should be   \shape Slur #'((0 . 0.25) (1.5 . 1) (0 . 1) (0 . 0.5)) Thanks for your quick answer.

How to transpose a custom slur

2013-12-20 Thread Marten Visser
Hi all, When transposing a score, how can I make sure that custom slurs will also get transposed? Is there any way to read out how much the notes in the score have moved up/down, so that I can use that as a variable in the custom slur definition? Please see the example below how a custom slur

Re: How to transpose a custom slur

2013-12-20 Thread David Nalesnik
Hi Marten, On Fri, Dec 20, 2013 at 5:12 PM, Marten Visser msvis...@planet.nl wrote: Hi all, When transposing a score, how can I make sure that custom slurs will also get transposed? Is there any way to read out how much the notes in the score have moved up/down, so that I can use that as a

Re: How to transpose a custom slur

2013-12-20 Thread David Nalesnik
Hi again, On Fri, Dec 20, 2013 at 6:08 PM, David Nalesnik david.nales...@gmail.comwrote: [...] Sorry, goofed the syntax... myMusic = { \shape #'((0 . 0.25) (1.5 . 1) (0 . 1) (0 . 0.5)) Slur should be \shape Slur #'((0 . 0.25) (1.5 . 1) (0 . 1) (0 . 0.5))

Re: how to transpose midi one octave ?

2010-03-03 Thread Mats Bengtsson
Neil Puttock wrote: On 2 March 2010 12:18, Mats Bengtsson mats.bengts...@ee.kth.se wrote: I just uploaded a patch in GIT, adding a related comment in http://lilypond.org/doc/v2.13/Documentation/notation/common-notation-for-fretted-strings#References-for-fretted-strings +Scores for

how to transpose midi one octave ?

2010-03-02 Thread Martin Tarenskeen
Hi, I'm sure my question is answered somewhere in the docs, but I can't find it: I have a guitar score and the MIDI output should sound one octave lower than the written notes. I have found sections about transposing instruments, but not about an instrument that plays in the written key,

Re: how to transpose midi one octave ?

2010-03-02 Thread David Kastrup
Martin Tarenskeen m.tarensk...@zonnet.nl writes: I'm sure my question is answered somewhere in the docs, but I can't find it: I have a guitar score and the MIDI output should sound one octave lower than the written notes. I have found sections about transposing instruments, but not about an

Re: how to transpose midi one octave ?

2010-03-02 Thread James Bailey
\score { \new Staff { \transpose c' c { \guitarMusic} } \midi {} } should do the trick. On 02.03.2010, at 12:28, David Kastrup wrote: Martin Tarenskeen m.tarensk...@zonnet.nl writes: I'm sure my question is answered somewhere in the docs, but I can't find it: I have a guitar score and the

Re: how to transpose midi one octave ?

2010-03-02 Thread Martin Tarenskeen
On Tue, 2 Mar 2010, David Kastrup wrote: Martin Tarenskeen m.tarensk...@zonnet.nl writes: I have a guitar score and the MIDI output should sound one octave lower than the written notes. I have found sections about transposing instruments, but not about an instrument that plays in the

Re: how to transpose midi one octave ?

2010-03-02 Thread Mats Bengtsson
David has already provided an excellent answer, namely to insert a \transposition c at the top of the music, see http://lilypond.org/doc/v2.12/Documentation/user/lilypond/Displaying-pitches#Instrument-transpositions Then, there's no need for a separate \score block for the MIDI output.

Re: how to transpose midi one octave ?

2010-03-02 Thread Martin Tarenskeen
On Tue, 2 Mar 2010, James Bailey wrote: \score { \new Staff { \transpose c' c { \guitarMusic} } \midi {} } should do the trick. Does this mean I have to use two \score sections. One for \midi and onBe {} for \layout {} like this? : \score { \new Staff { \transpose c' c { \guitarMusic} }

Re: how to transpose midi one octave ?

2010-03-02 Thread Mats Bengtsson
Mats Bengtsson wrote: David has already provided an excellent answer, namely to insert a \transposition c at the top of the music, see http://lilypond.org/doc/v2.12/Documentation/user/lilypond/Displaying-pitches#Instrument-transpositions Then, there's no need for a separate \score block

Re: how to transpose midi one octave ?

2010-03-02 Thread Mark Knoop
At 13:12 on 02 Mar 2010, Martin Tarenskeen wrote: On Tue, 2 Mar 2010, James Bailey wrote: \score { \new Staff { \transpose c' c { \guitarMusic} } \midi {} } should do the trick. Does this mean I have to use two \score sections. One for \midi and onBe {} for \layout {} like this? :

Re: how to transpose midi one octave ?

2010-03-02 Thread James Bailey
How very nifty. Hopefully I remember this if ever I need midi output transposed. On 02.03.2010, at 13:05, Mats Bengtsson wrote: David has already provided an excellent answer, namely to insert a \transposition c at the top of the music, see http://lilypond.org/doc/v2.12/

Re: how to transpose midi one octave ?

2010-03-02 Thread Neil Puttock
On 2 March 2010 12:18, Mats Bengtsson mats.bengts...@ee.kth.se wrote: I just uploaded a patch in GIT, adding a related comment in http://lilypond.org/doc/v2.13/Documentation/notation/common-notation-for-fretted-strings#References-for-fretted-strings +Scores for these instruments should use the

Re: how to transpose midi one octave ?

2010-03-02 Thread Roman Stawski
Martin Tarenskeen m.tarenskeen at zonnet.nl writes: Does this mean I have to use two \score sections. One for \midi and onBe {} for \layout {} like this? : \score { \new Staff { \transpose c' c { \guitarMusic} } \midi {} } \score { \new Staff { \guitarMusic } \layout {} } I was hopening