Christof Biebricher wrote: > There is a solution I used in my scores. However, it is VERY unprofessional. > I write the score as it sounds and coded in the pmx-file the transposing > commands for the respective voices for scor2prt. I am sure that a real > professional will have full contempt this procedure, but in my opinion, > there is really no justification any more for making the scores more > difficult to read as necessary. It was once probably required to minimize > transposing errors from copists. Computers, however, do not make > errors in transposing.
The problem is, that I want the score to be transposed (every part in its key). So what you described is a score in ONE key that transposed parts are created from. In fact I don't need the parts only the score... > In my muisc study, we had to play piano excerpts from full-page scores > containing transposing instruments, the coro being noted in the classical > soprano, alto, tenor and bass clefs, and I think it was difficult enough > to overlook 12 or more staves in different clefs. And I do not know what > the midi conversion would do with transposing instruments. As you see above midi also doesn't matter... I simply want: Trumpet 1 in D Trumpet 2 in D Alto Sax in Eb Trombone in C in one score. Thanks, Thorsten _______________________________________________ TeX-music mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://sunsite.dk/mailman/listinfo/tex-music
