Irish Roll Ornament

• Nov 30, 2010 - 03:26

I'd like to see the Irish roll ornament added to the articulations and ornaments palette. It's a half-circle symbol that is placed above the note if the stem is down, and conversely, below the note if the stem is up, with the half-circle opening toward the note head. It is a generic symbol used to indicate a roll or a cran, depending on context. It was devised by Breandan Breathnach in his book "Ceol Rince na hEireann" (1963) and is now a part of standard notation for Irish tunes.


Comments

In reply to by [DELETED] 5

I suppose the closest existing MuseScore ornament would be the fermata minus the dot. The Irish roll symbol looks to me more lightly struck than a standard fermata, like the fermata over the "u" in the MuseScore logo at the top of this Web page. That is, it's really more of a half-circle, with no thickening of the line in the middle or tapering at the endpoints/cusps. The horizontal span of the Irish roll also seems to me a little narrower than the standard fermata. By the way, how does one use the fermata ornament without the dot?

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