Adam Monsen <haircut <at> gmail.com> writes: > > Is it possible to create modern, simple chord charts with LilyPond? I'm thinking > of the kind that are commonly used for sing-alongs that have simply lyrics and > chord names above the words. Something like this: > I scoured google, the bundled documentation (which is excellent, btw!) and > mailing lists but couldn't find examples of what I'm trying to do. Any ideas? > > If this isn't the right software to use, is there another bit of free (as in > freedom) software out there than can do this effectively? I've just been > typing > up songs in openoffice.org and manually putting the chords in the right place, > but this is a bit tedious. >
Adam, If you don't want to do music layout, (i.e. notes and staffs), but just lyrics and chord diagrams, it's actually easier to use gchords.sty, a TeX package to produce the output. The code looks like this: If a \upchord{\A}{picture} paints a \upchord{\E}{thousand} words then \upchord{\Em}{why} can't I paint \upchord{\Dsix}{you?}\\ The \upchord{\DmSix}{words} could never \upchord{\A}{show} the \upchord{\DmSix}{you} I've come to \upchord{\Eseven}{know}.\\ If a \upchord{\A}{face} could launch a \upchord{\E}{thousand} ships, then \upchord{\Em}{where} am I to \upchord{\Dsix}{go}?\\ There's \upchord{\DmSix}{no} one home but \upchord{\A}{you}. You're \upchord{\DmSix}{all} that's left me \upchord{\Eseven}{too}. You can find more information at http://www.aei.mpg.de/~peekas/gchords/. Of course, if you decide later that you want to add a melody line, or if you want to transpose the music, then you can't do it in gchords. I've done both LilyPond and Gchords. I use Gchords for sheets for my own use, and LilyPond, with melody lines as well as chords and lyrics, for music that I want to share with others. Hope this helps. Carl Sorensen _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user