> On 11 Feb 2020, at 11:47, Guo Brian <brian777...@hotmail.com> wrote: > > I am certain that the LilyPond community has a number of bagpipe players, and > I hope that I do not bother you with the following problem that I have come > across: > > I am transcribing a bagpipe piece written in Bb major into “conventional” > notation (where the scale is based on A), and come across the following > embellishment: <5DA7133284F3465EB0BE9810BF3AA654.png> > > In conventional notation it would be written as: > <A71E9284AA614F51BA611654DAFC8FDF.png> > > In case Mailman refuses to send the images, the embellishment consists of > what appears to be the beginning of a F doubling (written as the grace notes > High G and F), then a strike to D, then the main note becomes a High G. > Putting aside the possibility of the fingering, the sequence is gfdG, where > lowercase letters are grace notes and the uppercase letter is the main note. > > However, I am having trouble finding the name of the embellishment. I have > tried searching it by the notes, but without luck.
In other types of music, one can combine ornaments. So for example, as in bagpipe.ly, a \hslurg followed by a \grd.