Dear David,
if You, as an trombone-player, are of the opinion, that the notation with a
dashed line between + and ° is the standard,
I guess, I should use it.
An american trumpet-player has shown me that version, that I've been using
here, but this has been years ago.
2009/12/27 bobr...@centrum.is <bobr...@centrum.is>

> Ah, you want a dashed hairpin.  Is this to notate a gradual
> opening/closing?  I would not normally expect to see a dashed hairpin but
> rather simply a dashed line between the '+' and 'o'.  This means gradual
> open/close.  It seems that you want something like 'o > +' or '+ < o',
> correct?  I suppose you could mark one note with '+' and another with 'o'
> and place your hairpin between.  Again, however, as a trombonist I would
> find this notation non-standard and potentially confusing.  I don't know
> enough about your notation requirements to understand why you would want or
> need to notate it this way.
>
> -David
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Stefan Thomas" <kontrapunktste...@googlemail.com>
> To: bobr...@centrum.is
> Cc: "lilypond-user" <lilypond-user@gnu.org>
> Sent: Sunday, December 27, 2009 12:13:19 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
> Subject: Re: wah-wah-effect
>
> Dear David,
> thanks for Your help.
> I found out, that I can get a dashed hairpin with \once \override Hairpin
> #'style = #'dashed-line
> What I would like to do is getting a + and an "o" at the beginning and the
> end of the hairpin.
> The "o" is easy to get with
> \override Hairpin #'circled-tip = ##t
>
> But how I can do it with the "+"-sign?
> 2009/12/27 bobr...@centrum.is < bobr...@centrum.is >
>
>
>
> I'm not sure exactly how you want your wah-wah effect to appear, but for
> starters you can go here:
>
>
> http://lilypond.org/doc/v2.13/Documentation/notation/the-feta-font#index-Feta-font
>
> ...to find the glyphs you need. The ones you need are listed under "Script
> glyphs." One is "stopped" (looks like '+') and the other is "flageolet"
> (looks like a small circle). There is also "open" which looks like a small
> letter 'o'. I've normally seen the little circle (I'm a trombonist). I don't
> know how to do this without experimenting with it but if you want '+O' I
> suppose you could create a script called 'wah' or something and combine them
> together side-by-side. This would mean 'wah' on a single note. If you wanted
> the effect to span two or more notes I think you should be able to put the
> '+' over one note, the 'o' over the other and put some sort of dotted/dashed
> spanner between them.
>
> Sorry I can't be more specific at the moment but I hope this is helpful,
>
> David
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Stefan Thomas" < kontrapunktste...@googlemail.com >
> To: "lilypond-user" < lilypond-user@gnu.org >
> Sent: Sunday, December 27, 2009 5:51:19 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
> Subject: Re: wah-wah-effect
>
>
>
>
>
> Dear community,
> I've created a little image (with another program) to illustrate what I'm
> thinking of.
>
>
> 2009/12/27 Stefan Thomas < kontrapunktste...@googlemail.com >
>
>
> Dear lilypond-users,
> does someone of You know, how to produce a proper notation for wah-wah
> effect for trumpet or trombone?
>
>
>
>
>
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> lilypond-user@gnu.org
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>
>
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