At 09:53 AM 3/12/2004, David Raleigh Arnold wrote: On Friday 12 March 2004 01:48, Edward Sanford Sutton, III wrote: > On Wednesday March 10 2004 12:23, David Raleigh Arnold wrote: > > On Saturday 06 March 2004 02:53, Edward Sanford Sutton, III wrote: > > > Is there a preferred way to have two different dynamics in a > > > section of music to indicate that it is played at one level the > > > first time and at the next level the second time? > > > > fp is common, and I've seen pf. I've never seen f-p. > > fp to me implies that the note have a strong attack, followed by > immediately pulling back the intensity.
That's <sfz> sforzando. fp is forte first time, p second time.
Those are two separate articulations. Sforzando is an accented attack and is not necessarily followed by a subito piano. fortepiano is an unaccented attack that (by definition) includes a subito piano. <dynamic 1> - <dynamic 2> [- <dynamic 3>...] is the common notation for different dynamics on subsequent repeats.
Things may be different for guitar music.
-Todd
_______________________________________________ Lilypond-user mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user