rucial!
Paul
From: Jean Abou Samra
To: Paul Hodges , Xavier Scheuer
Cc: Lilypond-User Mailing List
Sent: 11/03/2022 12:41
Subject: Re: Opposite of Laissez Vibrer?
Le 11/03/2022 à 12:38, Paul Hodges a écrit :
> Perfect - Thank you! I'd never have thought of l
chord and control the directions
> individually.
>
>
>
> Paul
>
>
>
> From: Xavier Scheuer
> To: Paul Hodges
> Cc: Lilypond-User Mailing List
> Sent: 11/03/2022 11:12
> Subject: Re: Opposite of Laissez Vibrer?
>
> On Fri, 11 Mar
Jean Abou Samra writes:
> Le 11/03/2022 à 12:38, Paul Hodges a écrit :
>> Perfect - Thank you! I'd never have thought of looking there
>
> Where did you look? As this question comes up fairly frequently, I'd
> like to know if there is a better structure we can give to the manual
> on this to
Le 11/03/2022 à 12:38, Paul Hodges a écrit :
Perfect - Thank you! I'd never have thought of looking there
Where did you look? As this question comes up fairly frequently, I'd like
to know if there is a better structure we can give to the manual on this
topic to help people find their wa
Re: Opposite of Laissez Vibrer?
On Fri, 11 Mar 2022 at 12:06, Paul Hodges wrote:
>
> I need to set a passage for piano which consists of an extended melisma all
> of whose notes tie to a chord at the end. As using actual ties would become
> an illegible mess, the composer wrote
On Fri, 11 Mar 2022 at 12:06, Paul Hodges wrote:
>
> I need to set a passage for piano which consists of an extended melisma
all of whose notes tie to a chord at the end. As using actual ties would
become an illegible mess, the composer wrote a laissez vibrer after each
note, and then short "pick
I need to set a passage for piano which consists of an extended melisma all of
whose notes tie to a chord at the end. As using actual ties would become an
illegible mess, the composer wrote a laissez vibrer after each note, and then
short "pickup" ties in front of the chord. I can't see any o