Brett McCoy <idragos...@gmail.com> writes: > For a horn, I will have this for the notes: > > hornOneF = \transpose c g \relative c' { > \global > > % Music follows here. > > ... > }
[...] > << > \new Voice = "horn 1" { > \voiceOne > \transpose g c > \hornOneF > } It makes more sense to put \transposition g' into the horn part itself (but leave the \transpose c g for the horn part in place). Then you don't need to retranspose the Midi afterwards: it will be in sounding pitch anyway. It also means that if you quote the horn part in other parts as a cue, the cue will appear in the proper sounding pitch rather than in the horn's transposition. \transposition does not change the output at the place it is written: it only affects the interpretation if you use it in Midi or quote it elsewhere. -- David Kastrup _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user