Hi Wim,

I looked at the score of the Menuet - I do not find anything extraordinary 
there. The Bass clarinet in B flat (Si b) is transposed as usual. I still do 
not understand what you mean by „German“ and „French notation“.

Thomas

BTW: The French Horn parts (4 Corni) are also transposed, these are in F 
(french: Fa).


> Am 29.01.2023 um 10:29 schrieb Wim van Dommelen <m...@wimvd.nl>:
> 
> Hi Thomas,
> 
> "Short" is a dificult concept....
> 
> I think the best is to point you to a live example, check entry PMLP255074 on 
> the (magnificant) IMSLP collection (do not hit print, this is bad for your 
> carbon footprint as the full score is 170 pages <;0). I myself looked at part 
> III "Menuette" (still 29 pages :-). Within the score look for the Bass 
> clarinet line and compare this score with the other instruments, both 
> concerning the pitch to play it as checking the key in which it is done. A 
> befriended professional player confirmed me this is "German notation". I'm 
> looking for help in converting this to the regular way of working.
> 
> Regards,
> Wim.
> 
> 
>> On 29 Jan 2023, at 10:00 , Thomas Scharkowski <t.scharkow...@t-online.de> 
>> wrote:
>> 
>> Hi Wim,
>> 
>> could you provide short example?
>> 
>> Thomas
>> 
>> PS: I do not unterstand this sentence: << I want to play it properly 
>> notation (which is „French“ >>
>>> 
>>> Am 29.01.2023 um 09:43 schrieb Wim van Dommelen <m...@wimvd.nl>:
>>> 
>>> I encountered a piece written in so-called "German notation"  and I want to 
>>> play it properly notation (which is "French"
>>> 
>>> I can do the basic transposes but the key is always interfering and 
>>> produces strange results.
>>> 
>>> Is there a quick Lilypond recipe to convert this (from "German" to "French" 
>>> written) ?
>>> 
>>> Thanks,
>>> Wim van Dommelen
>>> 
>>> 
>> 
> 


Reply via email to