>>>>> "David" == David Kastrup <d...@gnu.org> writes:
David> What it does do is trying to track the current "tonality". David> That's an interesting idea but requires an editing mode that David> will _propagate_ corrections in order to work nicely. Of David> course, the same will be needed in order to have automatic David> note length recognition cooperate nicely with manual David> corrections, fixing later durations based on corrections on David> earlier ones. I'm not that interested in note length. I'm not a good enough keyboard player to be able to enter notes with very accurate lengths. I use the left hand to play the MIDI keyboard and the right hand on the keypad to do the lengths. I'm pretty fast this way, and pretty accurate, except for the silly accidentals midi-input-mode makes up. The problem is when entering long note values, which are common in early 16th century music, I have to leave the keypad to type \breve and \longa. >>> It works but has the major disadvantage that it doesn't play the MIDI >>> notes as well as reading them. >> >> The current version of lily-midi.el which I still need to fold into >> the LilyPond repository does not do so either. David> You probably mean not as much playing while entering (your David> MIDI keyboard should do that) as you mean playing while David> editing. No, I mean playing while entering. My USB MIDI keyboard doesn't have any sounds -- it needs the computer to do the playing. If I work hard with Linux audio, I can get Jack and a synthesizer to play sounds when I play, but midi-input-mode won't talk to Jack. David> midi-kbd.el retains the full timing information. So it is David> prepared for more complex editing modes that make use of David> them, the simplest of course being just replay of the current David> region exactly as entered (what to do with manual David> insertions/corrections? No idea). Again, this is not yet David> done. And I'm not quite sure how to best do it: one would David> likely need to open a (raw?) MIDI output device for it as David> well. I'm not sure how useful emacs deciding what you want to hear would be. Something like midi-play-region would be nice. -- Laura (mailto:lcon...@laymusic.org) <https://plus.google.com/u/0/116029698292079786511> (617) 661-8097 233 Broadway, Cambridge, MA 02139 <http://www.laymusic.org/> <http://www.serpentpublications.org> Mr. Barenboim recalled observing Mr. Boulez lead Schoenberg's "Pelleas und Melisande" with the BBC Symphony in the early 1960s. "I sat with the score during the rehearsal," he said. "At the beginning there is quite a lot of chromaticism, and at a certain point there was a chord out of tune and Pierre said, 'No, no, this is sharp, this is flat.' I was amazed. "As a pianist I had no idea how he heard all that. I mean, when I thought my piano was out of tune, I just called the tuner. So I asked Pierre how he did it. I was starting to conduct, and I wanted to know if this was something I could learn. "Pierre said: 'You have to have the courage to say what you hear and think when you conduct. Either the player will correct you and say it's not me out of tune, it's the second oboe, or you will be right. But in any case you will learn. Don't put your ego above the music. Do what you have to do for the sake of the music, and only in that way will you make progress.' " Quoted by Michael Kimmelman in the New York Times, January 10, 2010 _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user