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Re: question about transposing an interval of a 4th
From: |
Graham Percival |
Subject: |
Re: question about transposing an interval of a 4th |
Date: |
Sun, 21 Dec 2008 09:47:53 -0800 |
User-agent: |
Mutt/1.5.18 (2008-05-17) |
On Sun, Dec 21, 2008 at 11:26:16PM +1100, Cameron Horsburgh wrote:
> On Sat, Dec 20, 2008 at 11:49:10PM -0800, Graham Percival wrote:
> > ... I really don't understand this question. If you already know
> > how to transpose from C to Bb, why on earth do you need to ask how
> > to transpose from C to G ?!
>
> He wants it diatonic, so it's not that easy. \transpose c' g {a b c}
> would produce {e fis g} instead of {e f g}.
Oops, I forgot my first-year theory. In this case, he'd need to
write a scheme function. Actually, it wouldn't be hard at all...
this is a perfect intro-level scheme tweak.
I leave it as an exercise for the reader. Neil, Trevor, Valentin:
please don't give the answer. :)
> Even then, the extra \relative makes things get very messy:
Then omit it.
melody = {a b c d e f g}
{ \melody \\ { \transpose c' g \melody }}
Cheers,
- Graham
- question about transposing an interval of a 4th, chip, 2008/12/20
- Re: question about transposing an interval of a 4th, John Mandereau, 2008/12/21
- Re: question about transposing an interval of a 4th, Johan Vromans, 2008/12/22
- Re: question about transposing an interval of a 4th, chip, 2008/12/21
- Re: question about transposing an interval of a 4th, James E. Bailey, 2008/12/21
- Re: question about transposing an interval of a 4th, Jonathan Kulp, 2008/12/21