<have@anti.capital> writes: > I'm very certain that Parallel Squares will revolutionize the field of > music notation. There simply has never been anything like it.
But there have been statements like that for every discipline of science and arts a billion times over. It's almost a telltale sign where they lead when you just need someone else to figure out the unimportant details and do all the work. You might want to look at music braille which also gets along with a finite number of symbols. There is a reason it is used almost exclusively by blind musicians. There are various forms of piano roll writing systems all of which were to revolutionize music notation, and uniform keyboard systems promising the same. Of the latter, only the chromatic button accordion was significantly successful and, judging from the respective non-impact on pianos, organs and harmoniums, not as much because of its revolutionary approach to intervals but mostly because of the space and weight advantages for a portable hand bellows instrument. I am not saying that a division of labor can't work: I play an accordion myself that Morino constructed, having an adjustable chord octave as specified by the musician it has been built for. The construction actually never took off but I am certainly glad I have one of the handful of instruments containing it. Now you are setting out to revolutionalize music notation. How experienced are you with it? What kind of instrument have you studied to a degree where the shortcomings of traditional notation to represent the music interfere with your ability to compose? So far, it looks like you have a vague idea and are willing to "donate" it to the world at large as long as somebody else does the actual work. This is not how innovation works. You'll need to carry a whole lot more of the weight you want to see lifted than that if you want your idea to be successful, and even then it is highly unlikely that you will gain more than a handful of followers. -- David Kastrup _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user