Klarinet Archive - Posting 001479.txt from 2000/10

From: Andrea Bergamin <a.bergamin@-----.it>
Subj: Re: [kl] Writing 10 cents
Date: Mon, 30 Oct 2000 18:15:06 -0500

Il giorno 30.10.00 1:31, William Wright, Bilwright@-----.net ha scritto:

> Thank you for the reply. In English, when discussing notation, a
> 'note' consists of a 'stem' with a 'note head' attached to it. (except
> for a whole note, which has no stem, of course) 'Accidental mark'
> refers to the # or b which precedes a note if it doesn't obey the key
> signature.
>
> Can you explain where the arrow belongs in relation to the note
> head, stem, or accidental mark?

Has Tony has explained there is some symbol used for tone quarters. You can
we them in the file "Tsukumogami" I've uploaded into my site
(http://web.tiscalinet.it/Berga).
Since we are speaking of a precise pitch changing I always show a sort of
"tablature" for the player so I'm quite sure of the effect both from the
intonation and tone point of view.

One of the most important aspect in tone quarters for wind instruments is
that every position has a particular timbre.

I think that you are speaking of a not precise pitch shifting.

In this case it is quite common to put an arrow on the accidental, not on
the note. This means "play this note slightly higher or lower than usual".
Higher or lower in relation with the direction of the arrow.

I cannot show you this in this message because of the txt format; I'll send
you an email.

---------------------------------------------------------------------
Unsubscribe from Klarinet, e-mail: klarinet-unsubscribe@-----.org
Subscribe to the Digest: klarinet-digest-subscribe@-----.org
Additional commands: klarinet-help@-----.org
Other problems: klarinet-owner@-----.org

   
     Copyright © Woodwind.Org, Inc. All Rights Reserved    Privacy Policy    Contact charette@woodwind.org