On 4/12/04 3:06 PM, Owain Sutton wrote:
> My preference, from a performer's perspective, would be to have the
> whole thing in 20/8, and use dotted barlines to show the irregular
> subdivisions.

I have two different suggestions:

1. Like Owain suggested, use 16/8 (not 20) throughout, and notate
(3+3+3+3+2+2) on the first measure, and then notate the new division when it
changes.  Alternatively, you could do this with (d.+d.+d.+d.+d+d) where the
d's are quarter notes, stem-up.

2. You could use the method Orff does in Carmina Burana: rather than put
time signatures on every staff, just put 4/p.+2/p above the first bar, and
then 2/p.+1/p+2/p.+1/p or whatever above the bar when it changes.
Obviously, don't use fractions; just put one on top of the other (similarly,
the p's here would be quarter notes, stem-down).

-- 
Brad Beyenhof
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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