on 2013-05-21 at 13:18 David Kastrup wrote: > It would seem that you associate the term "pitch" with physical > frequency.
no, it's not me, it's the standard meaning of the term as used in music theory, psychoacoustics, musical acoustics, music cognition, and all the disciplines i know that deal with music and/or the perception of sound. it also seems to be the standard meaning in dictionaries and encyclopedias. BTW, its cleat that pitch is NOT physical frequency, but a perceptual sensation (dependent mainly on the fundamental frequency of an acoustic signal). > That is not how LilyPond uses the term fair enough, although honestly i don't see how it could be convenient to use an established term with a definite meaning to denote something else. imagine that, like florian, you're introducing lilypond to people with solid background in music theory (composers, musicologists, whatever). i can imagine that using the term "pitch" to mean something other than pitch is going to cause confusion. > A "note" is more than a pitch: it has duration, articulations, etc. fair enough, the term "note" has a less definite meaning, and can denote different things depending on the use. i'd rather not comment on the possible meanings of the term in the english language, and how it's similar or different form the german "Note" or "Ton" or the spanish "nota". _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user