2011/2/1 M Watts <zwy648...@gmail.com>: > On 01/31/2011 07:27 PM, Francisco Vila wrote: >> >> I vaguely recall this case known as 'false relation'. The listener >> could be fooled into hearing e' a' but the a' is sung by another >> voice. This would be the 'soft' case, the hard case is for 'f b' >> tritone sung by different voices. Don't rely too much in this... >> > > Nein, false relation is where you have two successive chords, where a note > of the first is inflected with an accidental to become a note of the second > chord, and this happens in different parts. > > So if D minor is followed by D major, the F to F# should happen in the same > voice, to avoid 'false relation'.
Yes, "cromatic" false relation. The other is "tritone" false relation. Anyway, "Part Overlap" is --I think-- the name of the game. -- Francisco Vila. Badajoz (Spain) www.paconet.org , www.csmbadajoz.com _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user