Hello Federico:

I wonder what's the meaning of the staff lines highlighted in purple...

The TabStaff lines that are highlighted in purple indicate string-damping.  
This is where the indicated right-hand finger rests or plants upon the 
string indicated causing that string to *not* vibrate.  The notation of this 
technique is not without historical precedent.  In harp notation there is a 
symbol (looks kinda like a coda symbol) that is used to indicate that note 
duration is to be exact.  Good classical guitar players will instinctively damp 
the strings in order to play the correct note duration.  In Fingerstyle guitar, 
the notation of a semi-transparent line to connote string-damping was first 
introduced by John Stropes for the music of Michael Hedges.  In the 
fingerstyle sphere a professional transcription can almost always be 
marked by the presence of string-damping notation.  In short, the purple 
line is the notation of silence.


Also, all the slides in your piece seem non legato, because they are not 
slurred. I use to write legato slides as:


c( \glissando d)

I am not familiar with legato slides.  Do you have an example that you could 
share with me?  I am intrigued.


But my tablature references are probably very different from yours.

I studied fingerstyle guitar with John Stropes for about eight years.  My 
transcription and typesetting techniques are largely due to the quality of 
transcription that John has published.  Although, I must say that Lilypond is 
a much more beautiful program than Finale for fingerstyle guitar notation.

I have made quite a bit of headway on my current transcriptions.  The 
issue with sharing the ones that I am working on now is that I do not own 
the copyright of the music.  I would have to get permission from the artist 
to share any bit of it.

One big thing that I am doing differently now is: Slurs.  I no longer use the 
slur function in tabulature.  I use something like this:

c4~ <\tweak TabNoteHead #'transparent ##t c\5 a,\5>

I created a little shortcut so that I can use \fakeSlur to mean a transparent 
TabNoteHead.  I use this now because I like the look of ties in tabulature 
more more than the look of slurs in tabulature.


Feel free to share the recording if you have found it, I enjoy fingerstyle 
guitar ;-)

The recording is from 2005.  I was 17.  I would be quite embarrassed to 
share it.  I will consider it though.  Oh, a friend of mine might be recording 
it soon.  I will definitely share that.

Rachael




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