Robert Glover wrote:
>I'm the (newbie) person whose post instigated this thread. I faithfully
> applied the advice given, but alas the result was not satisfactory. The lead
> sheet is a classic example of the worst possible case:
(snip)
>Anyway, thank you very much for the timely su
Valentin Villenave wrote:
> 2008/6/13 Mats Bengtsson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
>> Since the same request has appeared for ordinary notes, some clever Scheme
>> hackers have
>> made a function that automatically gets rid of the extra accidentals by
>> enharmonically rewriting the
>> music.
>>
>
2008/6/13 Mats Bengtsson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Since the same request has appeared for ordinary notes, some clever Scheme
> hackers have
> made a function that automatically gets rid of the extra accidentals by
> enharmonically rewriting the
> music.
Dumb question: are we sure we still do need th
Since the same request has appeared for ordinary notes, some clever
Scheme hackers have
made a function that automatically gets rid of the extra accidentals by
enharmonically rewriting the
music. Fortunately, it turns out that the same functions works also for
chords. So, go to LSR
http://lsr.ds
I am created a lead sheet consisting of words, chords, and melody in the key
of C. The bridge has these chords:
fis2:m7 b2:7 | e2:maj7 cis2:m7 |
In the key of C they appear okay in the pdf as: F#m7 B7 Etriangle C#7
but when I transpose it from C to B th