On Mon, Aug 5, 2013 at 10:38 AM, James Harkins <jamshar...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On Aug 4, 2013 5:30 PM, "Trevor Daniels" <t.dani...@treda.co.uk> wrote:
> > maybe it's as Phil stated in his answer: singers expect the lyric text
> to start with the note and do not follow other/foreign aesthetic styles
>
> Classical or jazz singers?
>

I can't speak particularly for either classical or jazz singers (though I
did a bit of both in my university years). My own arena of semi-expertise
is hymnals, and I typically see lyrics centered under the starting note of
a melisma/tie. The closest I see to a full left-align is perhaps a
fractional alignment, something that in our alignment system would be a
-0.9 or -0.8, so that the syllable extends out into the melisma, but still
has the uneven/centered look of regular syllables. Seeing a column of
flush-left syllables in the middle of a line of lyrics when there are 3-5
verses just looks *bad*, even if it is technically correct. Maybe not so
much of a problem in through-composed or single verse lyrics, but the
difference is glaringly obvious with multiple verses.

On a related matter, thanks for reminding me about the
lyricsMelismaAlignment tweak. I'll probably be putting that into my
template.

Carl
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