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Re: music engraving resources in the internet
From: |
Janek Warchoł |
Subject: |
Re: music engraving resources in the internet |
Date: |
Tue, 28 Dec 2010 16:06:06 +0100 |
Hi Keith,
your mail has strangely wandered into another topic, fortunately i've found it :)
>
> Hello, Jan.
> The article you pointed out earlier, by J-P Coulon, was more useful than anything I could find.
I found it very informative indeed. I wish J-P Coulon wrote something longer...
> The handbook from the Music Publishers Association of the United States, by contrast, has some mistakes -- such as putting the key cancellation /after/ the new key signature; we in the US are not that strange, actually.
>
> On Sat, 25 Dec 2010 15:28:01 +0100, Janek Warchoł wrote:
>>
>> I also went to the library of Fryderyk Chopin University of Music in
>> Warsaw, but surprisingly they don't have anything much interesting
>
> The well-engraved music itself should be useful.
That's true, but i suppose it would be hard (at least for me, i haven't seen too many scores and therefore lack big enough repository of reminiscences) to find a score containing some particular diffuculty that i'm trying to solve at the moment.
> I am a member of the closest University Library (which they allow for low dues even though I was never a student there).
> They do have engraving textbooks, so I read Kurt Stone's book, listed in the appendix to Lilypond's Notation Reference.
>
books.google.com can help to find which libraries have a book, but they might not yet include libraries in Warsaw;
> the closest copy of Kurt Stone's book I could could find books.google was in Dresden.
That's definately too far for me :)
Thanks for your answer,
Janek