Toine Schreurs wrote: > The transposition of the instrument does not depend on the key of the > music. On a B-flat sax a written C sounds as a B-flat. That's all > the information you need. > > So use \transpose bf c' {the music} > > And indeed, key E-major goes to F-sharp-major. The original > transposition from E-major to G-flat-major implies an A-sharp > saxophone.
At the root of this is the possibility that there should/could be two modes of transpose. 1) "Tonal" transpose: which would use double{flats,sharps} when appropriate. e.g. (as in this case) a G in E major is a flattened third, so when transposed to G-flat major *should* become a B-doubleflat. 2) "Atonal" transpose: which would favour the simplest spelling. e.g. G transposed up a tone would *always* become A. -- Mark Knoop _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user