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Re: Arabic music half flat accidental shape
From: |
Hans Aberg |
Subject: |
Re: Arabic music half flat accidental shape |
Date: |
Thu, 17 Jan 2008 21:05:43 +0100 |
On 17 Jan 2008, at 14:57, josephHarfouch wrote:
I am a fairly new user of Lilypond, and this is my first post. I am
very
excited to have come across this wonderful product, and I am very
grateful
to its creators. I am excited in particular about its potential use to
notate Arabic music, given the flexibility that its offers.
I have seen some discussions in this forum regarding the expansion of
microtonal music that Turkish music, for example, would make use
of, and
some of these discussions also mentioned Arabic music. Just for
interest, I
think an expansion of notating microtones is not really relevant
for Arabic
music as it is traditionally notated up till now, as there is
usually no
attempt in Arabic music notation to define intervals smaller than a
semitone. There are however intervals in some Arabic maqams (or
modes) that
are somewhat between a tone and a semitone, and these can be
indicated by
using half-flat and half-sharp notation. The precise quality of all
intervals, whether tones, semitones, or medium intervals, is
determined by
the maqam (mode) name and/or by listening to the music. Since lilypond
already offers a way to notate half sharp, and half flat, it
already can be
used without modification to notate Arabic music. There are a
couple of
things however, that I would like to be able to do. I'm not sure
whether
they are available, but I just don't know how to use them, or if
they might
be developed in the future. If they are not available, and it would
not be
too difficult or costly to add them, then I would be interested to
help
sponsor them.
1) The shape of the half-flat symbol that I see in Lilypond output
looks
like a reversed b, which I see in Turkish pieces but not in Arabic
music.
There is more than one system in use in Turkish music; see
http://www.musicstudies.org/Abjad_JIMS_071203.html
for a comparison of two relation to 53-equal temperament.
A
half flat in Arabic music is displayed as a b but with a slash
across (It is
hard to describe the shape precisely). Is it possible to access such a
symbol, and if not, is it possible to add it in the future?
Is this what they use on
http://www.maqamworld.com/
They also use some accidentals with up-/down-arrows.
2) This second request is not as important, but it just would be
nice to
have, if it is easy to implement.
It would be nice to be able to omit the name pitch on the \key
command, and
let lilypond default it.
for example instead of saying \key do \minor,
to say instead
\key \default \minor
or even better
\key \minor
and then have lilypond default to the notename pitch of do, rather
than
issue a syntax error. Lilypond would determine the tonic that by
knowing the
associations between modes and default tonics, or simply defaulting
to do
when that is not available.
This does not seem like a very useful thing in Western music where
most
scales are thought of as modulations of common scales, but in
Arabic music
there are lots and lots of modes to be learned and remembered which
are not
always grouped by modulation. The name of the mode or a group of modes
usually implies the name of the tonic.
The name "tonic" usually implies harmony, so I think a word like
"final", "finalis", might be better.
In this case it would to nice to
define this once in a file, and let the software manage it. For
example when
an Arabic music is labelled as Maqam Bayati the tonic is assumed to
be RE
(D), and the clef key markings reflect this. If the mode is
modulated from
its default tonic to another note say sol (G), only then the music is
labelled as Bayyati on sol and the clef markings are adjusted.
If I look at Maqamworld <http://www.maqamworld.com/>, the Bayati in D
has a flat on B. How is this written in notation? Is the Bb written
as a key signature, or is it always written as a temporary accidental
within the piece? Of it is Bayati in G, what is the key signature.
Otherwise, have you looked at the church modes? If you take the C
major scale, there is a church mode with a final for each of the
scale degrees, indicating the final(is).
And in Persian music, one uses koron and sori pasted into the Western
key signatures. So if this would be used with Bayati in D, it would
have a key signature consisting of Bb plus a E-halfflat.
Hans Ã…berg