On 06.04.24 21:58, Carl Sorensen wrote:
On Sat, Apr 6, 2024 at 12:54 PM Fr. Samuel Springuel
mailto:rpspring...@gmail.com>> wrote:
I just discovered that in English, there’s a shorter way to name
notes that would normally be specified with “-sharp” or “-flat”: “s”
and “f”. E.g. “f-sharp”
On Sat, Apr 6, 2024 at 12:54 PM Fr. Samuel Springuel
wrote:
> I just discovered that in English, there’s a shorter way to name notes
> that would normally be specified with “-sharp” or “-flat”: “s” and “f”.
> E.g. “f-sharp” can be written as “fs” and “b-flat” can be written as “bf”.
>
> However,
"Fr. Samuel Springuel" writes:
> I just discovered that in English, there’s a shorter way to name notes
> that would normally be specified with “-sharp” or “-flat”: “s” and
> “f”. E.g. “f-sharp” can be written as “fs” and “b-flat” can be
> written as “bf”.
>
> However, I noticed that this is
I just discovered that in English, there’s a shorter way to name notes that
would normally be specified with “-sharp” or “-flat”: “s” and “f”. E.g.
“f-sharp” can be written as “fs” and “b-flat” can be written as “bf”.
However, I noticed that this is not documented in the Music Glossary: