That can't be a tie because the second note would not have the
accidental, in general.
Gould is not always right in my view.
Andrew
On 26/09/2020 11:41 pm, Dan Eble wrote:
What kind of grob would an editor expect here? a Tie because it connects notes
of the same pitch, or a Slur because it
Le 26/09/2020 à 15:41, Dan Eble a écrit :
On Sep 26, 2020, at 08:55, Werner LEMBERG wrote:
Despite Gould's “incorrect” verdict, here is an example from an old UE
edition of Liszt's “Liebestraum No. 1”, which demonstrates that ties
over clef changes *do* happen and make sense sometimes...
I
> On 26 Sep 2020, at 20:58, Kevin Barry wrote:
>
> On Sat, 26 Sep 2020 at 19:30, Hans Åberg wrote:
>> The notes d♯ to e♭ have different pitches in the staff notation
>> system, which cannot express E12 enharmonic equivalents, so this
>> is slur. So it should be a slur that looks li
On Sat, 26 Sep 2020 at 19:30, Hans Åberg wrote:
> The notes d♯ to e♭ have different pitches in the staff notation
> system, which cannot express E12 enharmonic equivalents, so this
> is slur. So it should be a slur that looks like slur.
> >
> > I disagree. For all practical purpose
> On 26 Sep 2020, at 19:36, Dan Eble wrote:
>
> On Sep 26, 2020, at 13:11, Hans Åberg wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> On 26 Sep 2020, at 18:50, Dan Eble wrote:
>>>
>>> On Sep 26, 2020, at 12:34, Hans Åberg wrote:
> On 26 Sep 2020, at 18:04, Dan Eble wrote:
>
>> On Sep 26, 2020, at 0
> On 26 Sep 2020, at 19:56, Werner LEMBERG wrote:
>
The notes d♯ to e♭ have different pitches in the staff notation
system, which cannot express E12 enharmonic equivalents, so this
is slur. So it should be a slur that looks like slur.
>
> I disagree. For all practical purposes
>>> The notes d♯ to e♭ have different pitches in the staff notation
>>> system, which cannot express E12 enharmonic equivalents, so this
>>> is slur. So it should be a slur that looks like slur.
I disagree. For all practical purposes in standard classical music,
enharmonic equivalents *do* sound
On Sep 26, 2020, at 13:11, Hans Åberg wrote:
>
>>
>> On 26 Sep 2020, at 18:50, Dan Eble wrote:
>>
>> On Sep 26, 2020, at 12:34, Hans Åberg wrote:
>>>
On 26 Sep 2020, at 18:04, Dan Eble wrote:
> On Sep 26, 2020, at 09:41, Dan Eble wrote:
>
> What kind of grob would a
On Sep 26, 2020, at 12:34, Hans Åberg wrote:
>
>> On 26 Sep 2020, at 18:04, Dan Eble wrote:
>>
>>> On Sep 26, 2020, at 09:41, Dan Eble wrote:
>>>
>>> What kind of grob would an editor expect here? a Tie because it connects
>>> notes of the same pitch, or a Slur because it connects notes at d
> On 26 Sep 2020, at 18:04, Dan Eble wrote:
>
>> On Sep 26, 2020, at 09:41, Dan Eble wrote:
>>
>> On Sep 26, 2020, at 08:55, Werner LEMBERG wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> Despite Gould's “incorrect” verdict, here is an example from an old UE
>>> edition of Liszt's “Liebestraum No. 1”, which demonstrat
On 2020-09-26 9:04 am, Dan Eble wrote:
On Sep 26, 2020, at 09:41, Dan Eble wrote:
On Sep 26, 2020, at 08:55, Werner LEMBERG wrote:
Despite Gould's “incorrect” verdict, here is an example from an old
UE
edition of Liszt's “Liebestraum No. 1”, which demonstrates that ties
over clef changes
> On 26 Sep 2020, at 14:55, Werner LEMBERG wrote:
>
> Despite Gould's “incorrect” verdict, here is an example from an old UE
> edition of Liszt's “Liebestraum No. 1”, which demonstrates that ties
> over clef changes *do* happen and make sense sometimes...
>
> I still think that LilyPond should
> On Sep 26, 2020, at 09:41, Dan Eble wrote:
>
> On Sep 26, 2020, at 08:55, Werner LEMBERG wrote:
>>
>>
>> Despite Gould's “incorrect” verdict, here is an example from an old UE
>> edition of Liszt's “Liebestraum No. 1”, which demonstrates that ties
>> over clef changes *do* happen and make
Le 26/09/2020 à 14:55, Werner LEMBERG a écrit :
Despite Gould's “incorrect” verdict, here is an example from an old UE
edition of Liszt's “Liebestraum No. 1”, which demonstrates that ties
over clef changes *do* happen and make sense sometimes...
I still think that LilyPond should support that,
On Sep 26, 2020, at 08:55, Werner LEMBERG wrote:
>
>
> Despite Gould's “incorrect” verdict, here is an example from an old UE
> edition of Liszt's “Liebestraum No. 1”, which demonstrates that ties
> over clef changes *do* happen and make sense sometimes...
>
> I still think that LilyPond should
Despite Gould's “incorrect” verdict, here is an example from an old UE
edition of Liszt's “Liebestraum No. 1”, which demonstrates that ties
over clef changes *do* happen and make sense sometimes...
I still think that LilyPond should support that, handling the tie like
a slur in this case.
W
Le 26/09/2020 à 01:11, Carl Sorensen a écrit :
After our two-day break as requested by Jean, I thought I'd look for
something definitive about the question raised by Karsten.
I haven't found any cases where this question has been adjudicated, so we
don't have the court's opinion on this.
Howe
Am Freitag, den 25.09.2020, 17:11 -0600 schrieb Carl Sorensen:
> After our two-day break as requested by Jean, I thought I'd look for
> something definitive about the question raised by Karsten.
>
> I haven't found any cases where this question has been adjudicated, so we
> don't have the court's
Am Freitag, den 25.09.2020, 21:14 +0200 schrieb Jean Abou Samra:
> Le 25/09/2020 à 16:39, Jonas Hahnfeld a écrit :
>
> > Am Freitag, den 25.09.2020, 16:01 +0200 schrieb Jean Abou Samra:
> > > Le 25/09/2020 à 15:48, Jonas Hahnfeld a écrit :
> > > > Anyway, running black on all Python files gives th
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