Thanks for the latest posts, guys.Firstly to Alistair, I'm sorry that the copyright issue may be a bit more problematic than I thought you were at first implying,
If I find a piece, or make up an 'aleatoric piece' of random notes and bung it in the transnotator, would that show you what you want to see?
I downloaded the Finnissy PC score. (Is this stuff serious?) and scanned a page of it into Finale. As expected, Finale couldn't recognise 99% of the notes. But I get the idea. Even the composer had to write in letternames for all the legerline notes.So here is my quasi-Finnessy aleatoric excerpt, and its transnotation into ES.
So here is my quasi-Finnessy aleatoric excerpt, and its transnotation into ES.
If Finnissy's music was available in a proper Finale format, or another music program that could be converted into Finale, then every notational method employed in his original TN, such as complex polyphony and polyrhythms, can be copied unchanged into the ES template. The main difference between the original and an ES translation is simply that playing the right notes is easier in ES, because of the unique representation for each of the 12 pitch classes, and the 'cycling' of octaves. These are properties that are demanded of any AN in the MNMA's screening criteria.I am not going to enter such complex music by hand into Finale to satisfy your desire that I accurately transnotate an actual passage of his music.
Maybe you don't quite understand that I have developed an automated program for converting TN into ES and also into some of the other ANs that have been requested of me.
By the way, how on earth could anyone possibly learn such music? Are you sure it was 'composed', note by note, to start with?
if you would prefer, I can provide you with ANY piece of piano music you would like, AS LONG AS YOU SEND ME A COMPUTER MUSIC FILE OF IT!
I should think that learning ES would be less time consuming than writing all these posts!
I do feel rather sorry for traditional composers of such complex music though, to think that they are forever counting legerlines and aligning them so carefully from note to note and having to write an accidental in front of every single note, because otherwise a reader will be checking backwards for accidentals and each bar is so long!
This is all very interesting. You say you are not thinking about letternames, yet you mention the notes you recognise quickest by their lettername (B, F and E). So is it mainly the black keys that you are not thinking about letternames for?
How old is your son? It will be interesting to see how far he gets with the Moonlight. You might have to give him a crash course in piano technique!
if you have some kids reading music through the AN then they're going to get completely screwed when it comes to doing stuff in class, and if they want to join the orchestra or other ensemble i doubt the conductor is going to go find a copy of the score in the AN.
but with this AN, reading the little notes that are still in the same little gap between lines could prove a pain because if the composer is too careless there could be trouble with working out what note it's actually meant to be.
like we're thinking budding composers who are just doing school stuff, then their teachers are going to be what if they don't understand the notation...
In working on automatic convertion of TN into ES, the rhythmic part has been a problem, in that Finale does not support completely different coding for note values. So I attach the extra stem to half notes as an 'articulation'. This is semi-automatic, in that you can say 'Apply articulation X to all note values from halfnote to dotted halfnote'. However the extra stem cannot be joined to the note head and also be tha same length as the true stem so I opted for alligning the stem ends.To convert wholenotes, I attach an extra double stem as an articulation, then convert all wholenotes to halfnotes without rebarring. The playback is a little inaccurate, but the notation looks correct.I have done a little exercise of 4 part writing in one stave showing TN and ES. In ES the 4 parts are easily followed by:part 1 = stems up on left, part 2 = stem up on right, part 3 = stem down on left, part 4 = stem down on right.In the TN version there is ambiguity as to which part sings the wholenote.Thanks for the question Charleyg.JohnK
Hi Alistair,I'm not sure if I understand your implication here, and invite you to explain further.
Are there any scores of Sorabji's solo piano music available online, so i could look at what you refer to, and also possibly listen to the music? I did find the music very interesting when I followed some links a while back, but i dont think they showed the scores. From what i recall, it seemed that his music involved a new kind of harmonic language, which, while not being atonal, did not seem to be derived from conventional tonal sources either, yet seemed to make sense. In any case i am interested to hear (and see) more of it. Also to see the kind of notation requirements.The fact that the editors did 'engrave' the scores with music software programs means that they could be presented in this form online in the future, and therefore available for future notation conversion applications.Cheers, JohnK
johnk, I just looked at Klavar.I'm curious about why you decided not to have a vertical notation.
Yo rimv2!Ah dig yo lingo man, but which Beethoven did ya look at (Moonlight mvt 1 or 3?).Da jpg files dat show on da screen aint da best lookin samples, but da PDFs is cool when ya print em.An which part looks congested? - dats wot AH'd like to know! Could be dat you is tryin to look at da notes touchin or overlappin like some other dudes did, instead of jus lookin at da note color. Da color is wot tells yo wot key to play.An yo aint gonna fail nothin bro! Youse jus gotta get da raht tude!Ya dig?JohnK
But I will consider doing some big note stuff.
They were at only 5th grade piano standard but both played the Chopin Fantasie Impromptu brilliantly.