[Christopher B. J. Smith:] >There exists a perfectly clear convention for rests AND notes lasting >an entire measure where the measure is longer than 4/4; for rests it >is a whole rest, for notes it is a double (barred) whole note |O| >like that.
I've only heard of the one for a whole-bar rest, not for a note. I guess the latter is no more confusing than the former, looked at rationally; but it looks extremely odd to me, and the idea of notating it would take me a bit of getting used to. I would be especially reluctant to use it if the double whole note (or breve, as I would call it) could reasonably be a partial value for the bar in question. I would certainly prefer to use a single, exact note, even if it was unusual - such as the double-dotted semibreve in the 7/4 example I mentioned earlier. (I do vaguely seem to recall this coming up on the list before, and double-dotted notes for septuple metres were not much favoured.) Is the full-bar note convention found only in 20th-century music, or even late 20th-century music? (If this exists as an accepted convention, I'm slightly surprised I've never heard any clue of it; but, the more recently it originated, the more easily I could have missed seeing it.) I have seen breves printed either as round or square notes (in both cases with bars on both sides). As far as I know, this difference normally has no meaning at all; but I have occasionally considered the idea of using the square version for a full long bar, or (in unbarred music) for an indefinitely long value (such as where a note in piano music is held by the pedal until it fades away), and the round note only for a strict value of two semibreves. But I've never actually used this distinction in a regular way - I have a bit of reluctance to invent new conventions like this, no matter how clear they are. Regards, Michael Edwards. _______________________________________________ Finale mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.shsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/finale