I thought this might be of interest.  Alda is a LilyPond-inspired programming 
language for musicians to use to produce music, i.e. audio (midi, etc.).  I 
wonder why he didn’t just use LilyPond syntax, or at least follow it more 
closely? 

http://daveyarwood.github.io/alda/2015/09/05/alda-a-manifesto-and-gentle-introduction/
 
<http://daveyarwood.github.io/alda/2015/09/05/alda-a-manifesto-and-gentle-introduction/>

https://github.com/alda-lang/alda <https://github.com/alda-lang/alda>

From the comments on that blog post:

"Are you familiar with LilyPond? It seems as though you've reinvented the wheel 
here."

"LilyPond is actually a major influence on Alda. The key difference between 
LilyPond and Alda is that LilyPond is a tool for generating typeset music, 
whereas Alda generates audible music. I'm aware that you can export MIDI from 
LilyPond scores, and at the moment Alda can only generate MIDI music, so for 
now, there probably aren't a lot of things that you can do with Alda that you 
can't already do by writing a LilyPond score and exporting it to MIDI, but in 
the future, Alda will support other kinds of music besides MIDI, e.g. sampled 
sounds, waveform synthesis.”

also:

"It would be great if Alda could output sheet music PDF’s"

"we do have plans to integrate LilyPond (http://lilypond.org 
<http://lilypond.org/>), so that Alda can generate LilyPond scores from Alda 
scores."

-Paul

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