Dear Richard,

I'm not sure what you mean, but I think I would do something like this for putting multiple clefs together.

-William

% ------------------
\version "2.25.16"

\relative c' {
  \override Staff.Clef.stencil = #ly:text-interface::print
\override Staff.Clef.text = \markup { \raise #-2 \musicglyph "clefs.G" \raise #0 \musicglyph "clefs.F" \raise #-1 \musicglyph "clefs.C" \raise #0 \musicglyph "clefs.C" }
  \clef tenor
  c4
}
% ------------------


On 6/8/24 10:03, Richard Shann wrote:
I think it's not uncommon for two clefs to appear side by side at the
start of a piece (e.g. when a piano piece starts with both staves in
bass clef so as to alert the pianist that the upper staff is not in
treble clef).
How is this done in LilyPond?

Richard Shann



--
William Rehwinkel (any pronouns)
Juilliard School '26 - Oberlin Conservatory '24
will...@williamrehwinkel.net - https://williamrehwinkel.net
PGP Public Key: https://ftp.williamrehwinkel.net/pubkey.txt

Attachment: OpenPGP_signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature

Reply via email to