Darcy James Argue:
It wouldn't be a problem if the list owner was doing his job.
Darcy, I have to say I feel you are being unfair and unkind to Henry.
Although I don't post frequently these days, I for one am very appreciative
of the service he and his employers provide for us all. It's
At 8/26/2005 09:36 AM, Peter wrote:
It wouldn't be a problem if the list owner was doing his job.
Darcy, I have to say I feel you are being unfair and unkind to Henry.
Although I don't post frequently these days, I for one am very appreciative
of the service he and his employers provide for us
The most aggravating part of unwelcome list msgs (autoreplies, spam,
etc.) is all the complaint threads that follow. If everyone would bite
his/her tongue when such nusiance msgs come thru we'd all be happier.
Henry is, after all, an intelligent adult. Why don't we trust him to do
his job
Thanks for your mail. My computer is going into the shop today, and I am away
until Labor Day. I will try to check my email/phone periodically...if you have
sent an mp3 for evaluation, it will take place after Labor Day (Sept. 5th). If
you are a Berklee student looking for an ensemble waiver, I
Darcy James Argue / 2005/08/25 / 03:36 PM wrote:
A volunteer job is still a job. You shouldn't volunteer for a job if
you don't plan to actually fulfill your responsibilities. If someone
is a volunteer firefighter in a small town, and yet never shows up at
the scene of a fire, then they are
Well, look, it's been going on for like a month. Maybe more.
A week, ok, so the list moderator is busy. Two weeksOk, maybe he's
on vacation. Three weeksok, must be a good vacation. A
month..damn good vacation. Five weeksum*tap tap*
anyone home?
Seriously, I think
"On theThird Day of Lab'r Day,
MyFin-List Gaveto Me -
-
Three mp3 Files,
Two Berklee Students, and
AnAuto-mail
From John Mc - Gann"
Best,
Les -
- who always believes in the power of sweetly mild humor to help diffuse
the potency of that which might otherwise become contentious.
Eric Dannewitz wrote:
Well, look, it's been going on for like a month. Maybe more.
A week, ok, so the list moderator is busy. Two weeksOk, maybe he's
on vacation. Three weeksok, must be a good vacation. A
month..damn good vacation. Five weeksum*tap tap*
anyone
I think it's how many Months this has been going on.
On the first week, second week.what are we on now, 5 or 6?
Williams, Jim wrote:
___
On the Third Day of Lab'r Day,
My Fin-List Gave to Me - -
Three mp3 Files,
Two Berklee Students, and
An Auto-mail
On 26 Aug 2005 at 15:13, dhbailey wrote:
Lighten up on Henry. Maybe he is doing his job just the way he sees
it should be done, and perhaps you and Darcy are just on the wrong
list.
If you want a list moderator who looks at every message and approves
it before it is posted so you don't
Start another list and miss great comments like this one? And miss your
great insights?
Compared to other lists, this moderator is MIA. That is all we are
saying. If he could not devote time in the last month, month and a half
this McGann email thing has been going on, then..why is he
I second what Bob is saying. I have an e-mail filter that is sending
all the auto respond messages to their own folder until the lister
comes back and sets things right. Not a big deal IMHOand
certainly a small inconvenience compared to the benefits I have
enjoyed due to the
Hey all,
This is regarding the Basic Orch Percussion GPO instrument included
in GPO Finale Edition (and GPO full):
Can anyone tell me what the difference is supposed to be between the
cymbals they call piatti cymbals (found at C6, C#6, and D6) and the
crash cymbal (found at D#6)? I know
On 26 Aug 2005, at 7:12 PM, Darcy James Argue wrote:
(and the crash cymbals are obviously hit harder and allowed to righ)
Should be allowed to RING.
- Darcy
-
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Brooklyn, NY
___
Finale mailing list
Finale@shsu.edu
Hi Darcy,
The way I understand itCrash Cymbal is singular (not plural)...it
is a suspended cymbal. But this term is often mixed up because Clash
Cymbals are the two cymbals that are hit together like plates...
(hence Piatti...pl.) Often folks will say Crash Cymbals when what is
Hey Karen,
I'm used to referring to a pair of handheld cymbals as crash
cymbals (what you would call clash cymbals or piatti) and a
suspended cymbal as, well, a suspended cymbal, even when it's crashed.
But now that I listen again, I now realize that what GPO calls a
crash cymbal is
On Aug 26, 2005, at 7:12 PM, Darcy James Argue wrote:
Hey all,
This is regarding the Basic Orch Percussion GPO instrument included
in GPO Finale Edition (and GPO full):
Can anyone tell me what the difference is supposed to be between the
cymbals they call piatti cymbals (found at C6, C#6,
Phil Daley:
I has happened at least several times before, and Henry has always stepped
in and fixed the problem.
Thanks for that, but what's your point? There could be any number of
reasons why he's not been able to step in this time. I just hope nothing's
wrong.
On Aug 26, 2005, at 5:08 PM, Darcy James Argue wrote:
Hey Karen,
I'm used to referring to a pair of handheld cymbals as crash
cymbals (what you would call clash cymbals or piatti) and a
suspended cymbal as, well, a suspended cymbal, even when it's
crashed.
Darcy,
I think that
Of course it works in a pdf created with Finale 2006, but we are
talking about eps, which is what I need. The publisher I work for use
a workflow that would be impossible to recreate with a pdf file and
we, as most publishing houses I guess, need eps to have more
flexibility with DTP
I don't know about its being a malapropism, but it's certainly a
redundancy. Piatti is just the standard It. term
for the pair (piatto/piatti) of symphonic clashed
cymbals. A crash cymbal to me is something on a
drum kit, along with the ride, splash cymbals
etc.
At 05:08 PM 8/26/2005, you
Darcy James Argue [EMAIL PROTECTED] 08/26/05 6:08 PM
At any rate, my main question was about the term piatti cymbal
which is used in both the GPO and the Finale manual -- this is
definitely a malaprop, right? It should be either piatti or clash
cymbals -- not piatti cymbal. Correct?
I'm quoting Andrew in full because I think he intended to send this
to the list and not just me personally.
On 26 Aug 2005, at 9:53 PM, Andrew Stiller wrote:
On Aug 26, 2005, at 7:12 PM, Darcy James Argue wrote:
Hey all,
This is regarding the Basic Orch Percussion GPO instrument
On 26 Aug 2005, at 10:35 PM, Darcy James Argue wrote:
The sound they call crash cymbal is actually a suspended cymbal
crashed (i.e., hit very hard, with followthrough) with a stick.
Actually, now that I listen to it again, I realize it's not being hit
with a stick -- I think it's actually
On Aug 26, 2005, at 7:12 PM, Darcy James Argue wrote:
Hey all,
This is regarding the Basic Orch Percussion GPO instrument included
in GPO Finale Edition (and GPO full):
Can anyone tell me what the difference is supposed to be between the
cymbals they call piatti cymbals (found at C6, C#6,
On 26 Aug 2005, at 9:53 PM, Andrew Stiller wrote:
On the jazz side, one of the two suspended cymbals in the standard
traps set is called a crash cymbal, and the other is called the
ride cymbal. The former is of heavier gauge and is for producing
big splashes of sound through single strokes,
I actually heard from Henry in private correspondence today. If
anyone is familiar with Mailman software, can they please email Henry
at [EMAIL PROTECTED] and explain exactly what he needs to do to fix
the current Reply-To behavior. Thanks.
- Darcy
-
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Brooklyn, NY
Actually clashed cymbals (not clash)
is a common term and the Oxford Companion to Musical Instruments uses
it. But I agree that most of us now just call them crash
cymbals.
Ken
At 06:54 PM 8/26/2005, you wrote:
This is another jazz/pop vs.
classical terminology thingy. In classical music, the
On Fri, August 26, 2005 10:36 pm, Darcy James Argue said:
I actually heard from Henry in private correspondence today. If
anyone is familiar with Mailman software, can they please email Henry
at [EMAIL PROTECTED] and explain exactly what he needs to do to fix
the current Reply-To behavior.
I
I'm curious about the use of crash cymbals versus clash
symbols. As I said, in classical circles, I have always heard
(and used) crash cymbals to mean hand-held cymbals. I have never
heard the term crash cymbals applied to suspended cymbals except
in jazz circles. However, if clash
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