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by John Ruggero
24 Oct 2018, 22:45
Forum: Notation Rules and Standards
Topic: Accidentals in early Berg
Replies: 6
Views: 7188

Re: Accidentals in early Berg

Thanks, David. For me, its actually a little easier to sing as notated, since my ears are firmly stuck in tonality and don't make much sense out of a series of chromatic intervals unless they hear the underlying harmony.
by John Ruggero
24 Oct 2018, 15:23
Forum: Notation Rules and Standards
Topic: Accidentals in early Berg
Replies: 6
Views: 7188

Re: Accidentals in early Berg

Berg is generating dissonant chords by using unresolved appoggiaturas alla Schoenberg. The Bb and G# are double chromatic appoggiaturas resolving to an understood A in the basic D harmony represented by the first two measures. The Bb is spelled as a neighboring tone as usual. Note the E augmented tr...
by John Ruggero
20 Oct 2018, 11:31
Forum: Digital Notation Tools
Topic: Finale update
Replies: 12
Views: 13985

Re: Finale update

MM seems to have concluded that it can't compete with Dorico in the long run and will hold on for as a long as possible by making a few less costly improvements from time to time. Unfortunately, Dorico doesn't have everything I need at this point, so I will have to put up with Finale for a while lon...
by John Ruggero
14 Oct 2018, 15:18
Forum: Digital Notation Tools
Topic: Finale update
Replies: 12
Views: 13985

Re: Finale update

Reading about the latest improvements seems to make Finale 26 a bust for me on a Mac, as I have never had speed issues. I will use my Finale upgrade money toward a future paid version of Dorico. It seems more likely than not that Dorico will surpass Finale in two years.
by John Ruggero
13 Oct 2018, 19:08
Forum: Notation Rules and Standards
Topic: Hairpin left edge vs. accidentals
Replies: 9
Views: 9926

Re: Hairpin left edge vs. accidentals

Your system sounds quite logical to me, Anders, and certainly wouldn't be confusing to players or disturb the appearance of the engraving since you carry it out consistently.
by John Ruggero
11 Oct 2018, 14:46
Forum: Notation Rules and Standards
Topic: Hairpin left edge vs. accidentals
Replies: 9
Views: 9926

Re: Hairpin left edge vs. accidentals

Gould has a discussion of this on page 104. (The following comments do not consider the case where a hairpin continues from a previous staff.) She says that the hairpin should start on the left side of the first note head, a practice I try to follow, unless, of course, there is a dynamic marking und...
by John Ruggero
07 Oct 2018, 14:32
Forum: Notation Rules and Standards
Topic: tied quavers everywhere!
Replies: 66
Views: 73370

Re: tied quavers everywhere!

Or just teach people to hold notes for the written duration unless expressly indicated otherwise! If musical notation were as unambiguous as a fool-proof manual, some of us, at least, would be out of work. Or, work would be a bit dull. As Anders implies, the length of a note also varies with contex...
by John Ruggero
04 Oct 2018, 14:09
Forum: Notation Rules and Standards
Topic: tied quavers everywhere!
Replies: 66
Views: 73370

Re: tied quavers everywhere!

A further complication is that one must take context into account to interpret all musical symbols, even the exact pitch of the notes themselves. This explains why, as David Ward points out, ten. can mean something different in an Italian opera and a Beethoven sonata, or as Anders Hedelin points out...
by John Ruggero
29 Sep 2018, 14:30
Forum: Notation Rules and Standards
Topic: The shape of the crotchet rest
Replies: 6
Views: 7043

Re: The shape of the crotchet rest

The quarter (semiminima) rest started as a reversed eighth (fusa) rest in white mensural notation, didn’t it? So it would be interesting to know when the form was first used. ...which illustrates once again why someone needs to write a book showing the evolution of every aspect of the notational sy...
by John Ruggero
28 Sep 2018, 22:56
Forum: Notation Rules and Standards
Topic: The shape of the crotchet rest
Replies: 6
Views: 7043

Re: The shape of the crotchet rest

As a result of which, I'm now having to research the origins of that form of rest.... You may find that the quarter rest has as many variations as the treble clef, maybe even more. I have always found it to be the most difficult musical symbol to draw by hand so that it looks like an engraved symbo...