The Clarinet BBoard
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Author: OlyDLG
Date: 2019-07-19 08:16
Hi, folks. I'm transcribing Mozart's Clarinet Quintet in A, KV 581 into MuseScore from a Boosey and Hawkes Pocket Score, and in this printing, in measure 101 of the first movement, the first violin has a run of sixteenth notes at first arpeggiating an F# major triad, i.e., the A is sharped, but in the second half of the measure, the A an octave down isn't explicitly sharped: this is either a typo, or simply an extension of the rule that an accidental carries through the bar in which it is used (though I thought that only applied to the actual pitch to which it was applied, not the same pitch in other octaves). In other words, Mozart, in this instance, didn't intend to switch, mid-bar, from major to minor, correct?
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Author: Ken Lagace
Date: 2019-07-19 16:38
Accidentals carry through the measure and to any other octaves in the measure.
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Author: nellsonic
Date: 2019-07-19 23:04
Ken Lagace wrote:
> Accidentals carry through the measure and to any other octaves
> in the measure.
Usually, but not always. It would be nice, but it hasn't always been that way everywhere.
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