On Sat, Nov 30, 2019 at 7:40 AM Kieren MacMillan
wrote:
>
> Hi Phil,
>
> > What on earth does a gradual piano pedal release achieve? Either the
> > dampers are touching the strings or they're not, so it's in effect a binary
> > choice.
>
> That’s not true: the amount of pressure applied by the
Hi Phil,
> What on earth does a gradual piano pedal release achieve? Either the dampers
> are touching the strings or they're not, so it's in effect a binary choice.
That’s not true: the amount of pressure applied by the dampers — from 100% to
0% — is graduated (based on how much gravity is al
Am Sa., 30. Nov. 2019 um 11:50 Uhr schrieb Andrew Bernard
:
> I don't write this stuff, I am merely the harmless drudge that tries to
> engrave it!
[...]
> I have seen other composers write the same thing also. I think
> it's a type of modernist composer shared delusion.
>
> The things we engraver
Am Sa., 30. Nov. 2019 um 01:20 Uhr schrieb Andrew Bernard
:
>
> I wonder if it is possible to indicate piano pedal gradual release off,
> and gradual on, using curves? Please refer to attached shots of MS.
>
> We have been able to do great things with pedal lines before in respons
Am Samstag, 30 Nov 2019 10:24:30 - schrieb Phil Holmes:
> What on earth does a gradual piano pedal release achieve? Either the
> dampers are touching the strings or they're not, so it's in effect a
> binary choice. So a gradual release simply makes the time the sustain
> ends somewhat arbitrary
Hello Phil,
I don't write this stuff, I am merely the harmless drudge that tries to
engrave it!
Although I think it's somewhat stupid, I will say, speaking as somebody
who has made harpsichords most of my life, and messed around with many
keyboard instruments, it is possible to hear very, ve
- Original Message -
From: "Andrew Bernard"
To:
Sent: Saturday, November 30, 2019 12:20 AM
Subject: Piano pedal gradual release
I wonder if it is possible to indicate piano pedal gradual release off,
and gradual on, using curves? Please refer to attached shots of MS.
We
Greetings Aaron,
This is very exciting what you are doing! I have nothing to offer but
encouragement. As a professional pianist, I can tell you that the
technique is hardly new. As a composer who loves LilyPond, the ability
to at last achieve this pedal marking with a degree of flexibility is
sore
Hi Aaron,
This would be great to go in the openlilylib library when ready, Thanks for
your help. I am sure that once available, many people will use this. It can
go alongside my pedal decoration code there (down with the help of several
others). Pedals have been somewhat neglected in lilypond, bei
On 2019-01-20 5:16 am, Andrew Bernard wrote:
Hi Aaron,
What we really want is a lovely curved bezier spline! I appreciate your
suggestion, but I personally would rather code PostScript than hack
hairpins to be pedal dynamics. I went through all that when I tried to
do
this by hijacking text sp
On 2019-01-20 5:16 am, Andrew Bernard wrote:
Hi Aaron,
What we really want is a lovely curved bezier spline! I appreciate your
suggestion, but I personally would rather code PostScript than hack
hairpins to be pedal dynamics. I went through all that when I tried to
do
this by hijacking text sp
On 2019-01-20 4:28 am, Aaron Hill wrote:
One option would be to exploit a Hairpin:
sustainGradualRelease =
-\tweak shorten-pair #'(0 . 1.35)
-\tweak height #1
-\tweak style #'dashed-line
-\tweak self-alignment-Y #DOWN
-\tweak to-barline ##f
-\tweak stencil #(elbowed-hairpin '((0
Hi Aaron,
What we really want is a lovely curved bezier spline! I appreciate your
suggestion, but I personally would rather code PostScript than hack
hairpins to be pedal dynamics. I went through all that when I tried to do
this by hijacking text spanners, and it was never satisfactory.
The desir
On 2019-01-20 3:04 am, Andrew Bernard wrote:
I use a wedge type symbol to indicate gradual release of a piano
pedal. Since this is not built in to lilypond, I developed code like
the following to do the job, using PostScript. I don't mind using
PostScript as I am fluent in it, but objectively, th
On 1/20/19, Andrew Bernard wrote:
> generalise this and make it more user friendly
I assume you know about this example:
http://lsr.di.unimi.it/LSR/Item?id=698
My instinct would be to print the sustainPedal brackets normally, and
then hack the Sostenuto pedal stencil (in bracket mode as well so
up {
\postscript #"0.15 setlinewidth [0.3] 0 setdash 0 setlinecap
6 -1.3 moveto 10.2 0.15 2 div add 2 rlineto currentpoint stroke
moveto 0.15 setlinewidth [] 0 setdash 0 -2.2 rlineto stroke"
}
s s s s s\sustainOff
}
\markup { "Pedal gradual release example"
Is there any support for pedal gradual release when using line and bracket
style where the gradual release ends in a sustain pedal off event? I am
aware that for a sustain on/sustain off event you can simply use bracket
flare settings, but in this case I need to influence the segment to the end
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