Re: Cross-hand notation

2010-05-01 Thread Martin Tarenskeen
On Fri, 30 Apr 2010, David Fedoruk wrote: Hello: The actual indication for notes played by the unexpected hand is M.D. (main droit) for right hand and M.G. (main gauche) for left hand. In this case, French is used instead of Italian. I think "m.d." and "m.g." (lowercase) is more common, b

Re: Cross-hand notation

2010-04-30 Thread David Fedoruk
Hello: The actual indication for notes played by the unexpected hand is M.D. (main droit) for right hand and M.G. (main gauche) for left hand. In this case, French is used instead of Italian. cheers, davidf On 28 April 2010 13:57, bipll wrote: > > Hi, list. I'm stuck with a symbol. On a pia

Re: Cross-hand notation

2010-04-30 Thread bipll
Thanks, postscript commands worked just fine. Surely, arpeggio doesn't suit this case, as it will produce the full bracket ("["), not just the upper angle. -- View this message in context: http://old.nabble.com/Cross-hand-notation-tp28393898p28412429.html Sent from the Gnu - Lilypond - User mail

Re: Cross-hand notation

2010-04-28 Thread Francisco Vila
2010/4/28 bipll : > > Hi, list. I'm stuck with a symbol. On a piano staff there's a symbol, looking > like square semibracket, suggesting that the note on a hand's staff should > be played with another hand, actually (don't know how it is called in > English, for, to begin with, I don't know how it

Re: Cross-hand notation

2010-04-28 Thread James Bailey
Perhaps the bracketed arpeggio? On 28.04.2010, at 22:57, bipll wrote: Hi, list. I'm stuck with a symbol. On a piano staff there's a symbol, looking like square semibracket, suggesting that the note on a hand's staff should be played with another hand, actually (don't know how it is called