> 1. How do I change the pitch of the 'root' note? I tried playing with the
> three numbers from "(+ tonic-position 3) 7) 3)))". But I can't understand
> their logic.
>
> I'm not quite sure what you mean: The pitch of the 'root' note is taken
> directly from the \key command.
>
> For example, the f
Hi Viktor,
Please forgive my ignorance, I have two follow-up questions:
1. How do I change the pitch of the 'root' note? I tried playing with
the three numbers from "(+ tonic-position 3) 7) 3)))". But I can't
understand their logic.
I'm not quite sure what you mean: The pitch of the 'root' n
On Wed, 6 Jul 2022 at 08:07, Lukas-Fabian Moser wrote:
>
> Am 05.07.22 um 23:39 schrieb Lukas-Fabian Moser:
>
> Hi Viktor,
> Am 05.07.22 um 20:17 schrieb Viktor Mastoridis:
>
> For educational purposes, I would like to see whether it's possible to add
> a small note head after the key signature?
Am 05.07.22 um 23:39 schrieb Lukas-Fabian Moser:
Hi Viktor,
Am 05.07.22 um 20:17 schrieb Viktor Mastoridis:
For educational purposes, I would like to see whether it's possible
to add a small note head after the key signature?
Like a single Ambitus note, really.
Why would I do it?
For examp
Hi Viktor,
Am 05.07.22 um 20:17 schrieb Viktor Mastoridis:
For educational purposes, I would like to see whether it's possible to
add a small note head after the key signature?
Like a single Ambitus note, really.
Why would I do it?
For example, I would like to add a (small) D note to a G-Majo
Hello,
For educational purposes, I would like to see whether it's possible to add a
small note head after the key signature?
Like a single Ambitus note, really.
Why would I do it?
For example, I would like to add a (small) D note to a G-Major key signature,
suggesting that, despite the F# key