Regarding your earlier reply, I'm glad you got your answer to your question, and thank you for clarifying how we got into that. I understand - and understood at the time - that you see the pedal + staccato as you do generally with musical notation, as conveying a particular sound (or trying to), which is why I wondered how staccato affects the sound if the pedal is down.
This I did not understand at all. What does understanding music "as theoretical motion, analyzing... etc." have to do with anything.
It wasn't a good description. What I was trying to point to has various aspects. The main one is that traditional notation is based on the diatonic scale of C major, which has a number of odd consequences for how we think about music. Being grounded in the major and minor scales, having positions on the staff only for the "naturals", and adjusting these with key signatures, then with accidentals, appears to force a particular
theoretical approach to music. For example, unless a person knows the (essentially arbitrary) rules, they cannot write music with any degree of confidence, since, confronted with their first black note, they do not know whether to notate it as a sharp or flat, and might choose the "wrong" one, despite these actually producing the exact same tone in 12-TET. Similarly, they do not know when they should tie a note to another half its value or dot it, or even what time signature they "should" use. Music as a written art is a dark art practised by graduates.
These rules we largely pass over without noticing when learning to
read music, because we're interpreting notes already
analysed according to those rules by composers and editors. We have oddities, however, that crop up - as when the same note is notated as a sharp one moment, a flat the next, because of the harmonic
movement of the piece as constructed by a
theoretically knowledgable composer (Chopin's Prelude in Em, for example, as I asked about here many months ago).
Before I learned anything, when I looked at a score, I heard things. It took several decades later to discover there is such a thing as analyzing.
How could you look at a score and hear things before you were taught what a score was, before you "learned anything"?
I didn't even know about finger numbers - I just found the most comfortable way of playing things.
Of course. I often ignored finger suggestions in scores. I still do.
Getting a score that indicates which hand plays what - no idea how that would have helped me.
Well I suggested a way it might help - by avoiding some of the work in deciding which hand to use. The same as finger numbers can help by avoiding some of the work in figuring out which finger to use. I'm not suggesting a dictatorial handedness any more than dictating fingering, it's just something that helps. I think we often don't notice that this is there when we approach any piano score with its grand staff. Its functions obviously include adding range by using different clefs, and the layout of the keys automatically lends itself to a default use of hands, but the staff surely indicates a default handedness as well.
But as I said, each to their own. I was influenced by the invention of Klavarskribo, which, for all its many faults, has note stems pointing left or right to indicate which hand is intended for each note, and when designing my own notation system I thought that was a useful thing to include. Naively, I took it for granted that keyboard music showed which hand to use, only to realise later that it doesn't, or not explicitly.
It is a wonderful gift to have a good ear for music, or a great ability to learn music theory and gain proficiency through study and deliberate application of rules. I see a lot of musicians who have one or other of these or both. I'm very aural and have only recently begun to try to understand music theory, which is a struggle for me. But I also intuit that there are a lot of people who, although they are "musical" enough to enjoy music and know the difference between beautiful sounds and bad ones, aren't as gifted either in aural skill or analytical skill, and if they learn to play at all, they tend to drop out of learning music. For them, a more engineering approach could bring a lifetime of pleasure. I'm pretty sure they can work out the notes and their rhythms given a simpler, more one-to-one mapping, a more logical system than the traditional, although the research is slim so far.
I wanted to be able to read music from manuscript, but I find it hard, and I find it irritating, and I'm pretty sure it's because the notation requires thousands of hours of relentless practice - of scales and arpeggios - and learning music theory, and still having to remember which cryptic switch has been applied to this or that note due to key signature or accidental, and to essentially sum the hieroglyphic duration icons of notes and rests to know when to start and end notes. It requires more time than I have to accomplish that, and probably more money for lessons.
So I began looking for a better/simpler system, and after much searching and reviewing what's out there, I started writing my own and collaborating with others doing other systems.
I consider it secondary to analyse harmonies, to know scales and such like. I also consider it secondary to develop sensitivity in technique, or aural sensitivity, ear training, all that. If people could read the pieces they want to play, because the notation tells them when to play and release each note in a reasonably straightforward manner, they could open a world of musical pleasure and potentially go on to gain all that future learning if they want to.