Yes, of course, you're right. Being a Jazzer, I was assuming above the note, I shouldn't have.
BTW, does any one know how to set articulations and slurs to always go above the notes. JS At 04:27 PM 6/5/02, Christopher BJ Smith wrote: >At 12:29 PM -0500 6/05/02, Joel Sears wrote: >>Here goes the start of another thread. I don't recall seeing an "v" >>shaped accent in Jazz writing. A sideways "v" I always heard called an >>accent. At school, in Texas, we Jazzers called an upside down "v" a >>"housetop." I got into trouble, though, in LA, at a recording session, >>for calling it that. After the studio musicians got through giving me a >>lot of guff about it, I found out that they called it a "gable" accent. ( >>I always had trouble recording there). >> >>Joel Sears > >When it goes underneath a note, it is inverted to a V. In many jazz and >commercial copying styles, all articulations are always written OVER the >notes, so you might not have seen it inverted. Even so, it is quite rare. >_______________________________________________ >Finale mailing list >[EMAIL PROTECTED] >http://mail.shsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/finale _______________________________________________ Finale mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.shsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/finale