Thank you, \transposition works nice. Only to find it. May be a tiny
reference in the midi chapter might be helpful?
Regards BB
Am 27.10.2017 um 16:14 schrieb David Kastrup:
> bb writes:
>
>> Thanks, I will try to apply \transposition pitch.
>>
>> I was looking in the midi part of the manual. L
bb writes:
> Thanks, I will try to apply \transposition pitch.
>
> I was looking in the midi part of the manual. Logically for me, this
> problem only relates midi?
It doesn't relate only to Midi (also to cue notes and quotes), but yes,
that's sort of a reasonable expectation that the manual
Thanks, I will try to apply \transposition pitch.
I was looking in the midi part of the manual. Logically for me, this
problem only relates midi?
Could be nice to have something simple like
\transpose c c, {
\midi{}
}
Regards BB
Am 27.10.2017 um 14:22 schrieb David Kastrup:
> bb writes:
>
bb writes:
> A /transposing instrument/ is one in which the absolute pitches of the
> notes played on the instrument are shifted up or down by a certain
> amount, compared to how they are written in notation. \clef "treble_8"
> for guitar takes account of, but is not always written, as that
> tra
I think you could use a combination of \transposition and \transpose.
\transposition changes how the pitches are written, but not the midi.
\transpose changes both.
On 10/27/17 13:50, bb wrote:
> A /transposing instrument/ is one in which the absolute pitches of the notes
> played on the instru
A /transposing instrument/ is one in which the absolute pitches of the
notes played on the instrument are shifted up or down by a certain
amount, compared to how they are written in notation. \clef "treble_8"
for guitar takes account of, but is not always written, as that
transposing property ias a