Sharps above the stave

• Mar 8, 2014 - 22:59

In my endeavour to understand the written score, I come across the odd peice that I cannot find an answer for through Google.

In a piece that I am making an arrangement for, I have come across notes that have a sharp or natural placed above the stave. (see image)
Accidentals in the piece are placed as would be expected, along side the note in question.
The instrument is a bass, the stave is bass cleff. key of C.

The piece I am reading was composed about mid 1600's, but this arrangement was from 2005.

Thank You.
Alex.

Attachment Size
sharps above the stave.jpg 59 KB

Comments

No idea what that notation means, but you could use staff text or 'miss-use' chord symbols for entering them, together with the F2 palette.

In reply to by Jojo-Schmitz

Figured Bass. It helps if you post the whole page but it looks to me as if the bottom stave is a guitar or lute continuo realization of the line above which is the bass line. The top line looks to be a viola line. Can you post a link to the original page?

Accidentals above the bass refer to the third above the bass and indicate whether the chord is major or minor. I think the natural above the fourth beat is incorrect and should be a sharp. The arranger has not added a natural to the continuo part so the last chord is A major, like the second chord of the bar.

The accidentals are put there for the player of the continuo part (harpsichord, theorbo, guitar, organ etc.) who would be able to improvise his own arrangement instead of playing the realization give in the bottom stave. I would expect there to be numbers above the stave such as 6, 6/4, etc. at other points in the score.

In reply to by Myer

it is exactly as you surmised, the top is a Viola with the bass beneath.
The third stave is guitar added in the 2005 arrangement.
and yes, there are numbers above some of the stave also.
Thank you, I believe that is the answer I was looking for.
I have substitued another guitar for the viola in my arrangement, but without the accidentals or numbers above the bass stave at the moment.
The image is from Praetorius La Bouree XXXII.
with my progress to date here, http://musescore.com/user/114629/scores/169345.

In 1600 there was only the 2 upper staves.
The clavicordist played the basso, adding the arrangement, and the sharps or flats told him if the third had te be major or minor (that is nowadays used in jazz, with other notations)

The third staff is (2005?) arrangement, written down,(in the key of G1 which duly take in account these indications. This arrangement takes in account the fact that in 1600 accidentals were not measure long valid. So in the left measure

D with a F# ; A with C# ; D with a F# ; A with C natural

Would have been easier if you had shipped the whole page

In reply to by murray45a

Just to confirm this is indeed figured bass.

Regarding the natural sign in bar 13: In 1600 minor keys were only just being establised, and the old church modes still had a high degree of influence on music. Consequently there was a degree of ambiguity about the sharpening or flattening of the 3rd of the Dominant chord, which is why the figures indicate an A minor chord whilst the Dominant chords earlier in the bar are marked as major.

To add to the confusion, this ambiguity was applied to the performance, and performers played the leading note sharp or flat depending on how they felt on that particular occasion. This could result in both being played at once :)

For an illustration of this look at English church music of the period where very often one part will sharpen the leading note and another have it flat. Consequently English church music of the period tends to be riddled with false relations as the modern system of keys had note been invented.

Hope this sheds a little light :)

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