Me too I've long been interested in this; I'd like to be able to
generate endless sight-reading exercises/material for guitarists,
perhaps in the form of duos with the computer playing one of the parts
just to keep things interesting. I've downloaded but haven't yet
looked at Strasheela
(http://strasheela.sourceforge.net/strasheela/doc/index.html),
thinking it might be something useful for such a project. Plus I think
Graham has expertise in it.

-Mike

On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 2:02 PM, Martin Tarenskeen
<m.tarensk...@zonnet.nl> wrote:
>
>
> On Tue, 20 Jul 2010, Mike Solomon wrote:
>
>> For what it's worth...
>>
>> I do a lot of exactly this: aleatoric composition in Lilypond.
>
> (....)
>>
>> I use Python for all of my aleatory and have Python spit out
>> lilypond-parseable code.  There is no good reason for this aside from the
>> fact that, for me, thinking creatively in Python is easier and faster than
>> thinking creatively in Scheme.
>
> That's what I was thinking. Doing such things in Python is probably easier.
> But the thought of a lilypond input file that produces random output files
> all by itself just intrigues me.
>
> --
>
> Martin
>
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>

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