On Sun, 26 Jun 2011 11:43:04 +0200, Marc Hohl wrote: > Am 26.06.2011 09:52, schrieb David Kastrup: >> Marc Hohl<m...@hohlart.de> writes: >> >>> Not to speak about accordion, where upper case letters denote the bass >>> note and lower case letters the chord. >>> >>> So you'll have (depending on the rhythm) >>> >>> C c c c / _E_ c c c / C c c c / E e e e / A am am am >> More likely >> >> C c G c / _E_ c C c / C c G c / E e7 _G#_ e7 / A am E am >> >> (the underlined bass notes are played in the row of thirds, and the >> whole is a typical Oompah accompaniment). > Yeah, of course! ;-)
But seriously, the previous poster illustrated the problem with lower case minor very well. I dislike intensely any music notation which tends to become unclear when handwritten, such as C and c, but AFAIK anyone who likes it can have it. Might it not be so with lower case bass notes? Regards, daveA -- http://www.openguitar.com/contact.html d.raleigh.arn...@gmail.com _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user