Request For Comments: more lute and Baroque ornaments.

• Nov 10, 2015 - 23:03

As I am working on adding more pre-Classical ornaments and as inevitably my experience has limits and my own priorities might be specialistic, I would like to hear from other interested peoples and fellow "early-musicians" (?!?) and try to arrive at some kind of consensus.

These are a few guide lines to reduce dead ends and further complications down the road:

  1. Ornaments to add should be present in the current edition of SMuFL (1.8).

    SMuFL documentation can be download at http://www.smufl.org/download/ and the PDF itself directly at the link http://www.smufl.org/files/smufl-1.18.pdf. SMuFL is huge, the most relevant sections are:

    • Other Baroque ornaments, p. 161
    • French and English Renaissance lute tablature, p. 268
    • Italian and Spanish Renaissance lute tablature, p. 271

    If there are other ornaments, not currently in SMuFL but considered important, it might be useful to know about them and collect them for submission to SMuFL, but they will not be included in MuseScore right now.

  2. SMuFL is not always clear about distinguishing between shape and function; I think we should start from functions (i.e. roughly speaking, "musical meaning") rather than from shapes, even if shapes are what we actually see in scores. So, for instance, Couperin's Tremblement appuyé in p. 162 of SMuFL has the same shape as Marais' Pincé ou Flatement but a very different meaning; OTOH, Couperin tremblement can also be rendered (and often is rendered) in modern scores with the current MuseScore prall prall ornament, which has quite a similar meaning; so that specific shape might duplicate an existing function, have only an antiquarian value and not be worth adding.

    So, in your suggestions, please refer to the function / meaning of the sign, rather than simply to its shape or, at very least, please tell if you consider important for inclusion because of the former or the latter.

  3. Please specify if you plan to use the sign in standard staves, in tablatures or both (we are allowed to disagree with SMuFL about contexts in which signs are used!).
  4. Please tell where the sign should be placed; several early ornaments have specific positions, not always fitting the modern habit of placing them above the note (and I do not necessarily know all the details!).

These is a list of the signs I am considering right now; probably not all of them and/or not all at once and some priority advice would be useful:

  • From p. 161:
    • U+E570 Port de voix
    • U+E575 Hook before note
    • U+E576 Hook after note
    • U+E581 Comma, assuming it is what is also called tremblement by some authors
  • From p. 162:
    • U+E582 Shake (so we can stop overloading the "Stopped/pizzicato" sign, which is not an ornament at all!)
    • U+E588 Pincé ? (not sure)
    • U+E589 Tremblement appuyé ? (not sure, maybe use its shape for the flatement instead?)
  • From p. 268:
    • U+EBD1 Mordent with upper auxiliary
    • U+EBD2 Mordent with lower auxiliary
    • U+EBD3 Inverted mordent (not sure of the shape, though: a more breath-like shaped sign seems to me more common)
    • U+EBD4 Appoggiatura from below ?
    • U+EBD5 Appoggiatura from above ? (in case, with exactly that # shape?)
  • From p. 271:
    • ???

Thanks!

M.


Comments

Thanks Miwarre for this thread.
I have perhaps not thought of everything today, but for my use case (baroque tabs), this is what I use.

For reference: this link: http://www.cjoint.com/c/EKlk5JjQNdo
For the relative symbols SMUFL:
- Other baroque ornaments.pdf
- Combining strokes for trills and mordents.pdf
- Vibrato in Italian and Spanish Renaissance lute tablature.pdf
- Virgula.pdf

And a .mscz file to sum it all up: Baroque ornaments.mscz
EDIT: same file, in a Baroque style (letters), to load with a recent nightly: 1 Baroque ornaments.mscz

As said, I do not like the comma design (too contemporary, not Baroque enough), I prefer the virgula in "Medieval and Renaissance Staves". I re-saw the size, of course, of these symbols. For see them, simply select the symbols -> Text Properties -> Size

NB: the three notes that are not in green color, it is simply to say that they are a slow priority to me. That's all! :)

EDIT: Ah, of course, forgotten the "x". Very common.
Eg see the first image in this thread: https://musescore.org/fr/node/83076
The Smufl page: mordents.pdf
And the updated .mscz file (second page, bottom): 2 Baroque ornaments.mscz

In reply to by cadiz1

Cadiz1, thanks for the reply and for the wealth of material.

A few notes, first about function vs. shape.

  1. The several "half circles" and "hooks" you list (namely, U+E571, U+E573, U+E575, U+E591, U+E59E for the left side and U+E572, U+E574, U+E576, U+E590, U+E592 for the right side) all have a different function (musical meaning) or are, at least in part, different stylistic variants for the same function? In the latter case, it would be wise to start with a single shape for each function.

    In particular, I know U+E575 and U+576 (hook before and after note) to be used in standard staves (not in tabs) like in this example (from J. Morel, Pièces de viole, 1709):
    NOT FOUND: 1

    Also, the signs in the U+E590 – U+E5AF range are used to create complex trill shapes (again in standard staves only, I believe), rather than as separate signs in tabs.

  2. Same thing for the several 't' signs: U+E584, U+E595, U+E596 (the latter two are intended for combination with wavy lines, rather as separate signs). Are different functions involved or only different typographic styles? Wouldn't U+E584 alone be enough, choosing an appropriate shape wisely?
  3. Same thing again for the 'double cross' signs, U+EBD2 and U+EDF6.
  4. A case a part is your usage of U+E583 and U+E59F (the vertical lines). The first codepoint is intended for I do not know what (!) and the second is again intended for combining (as in the mordent sign). I believe the usage you refer to is to connect two vertically aligned notes, which is a very different function and requires a two-note construct to be properly implemented (either by drawing a variable-length vertical line or, at least, by properly centring a fixed-length glyph).

    So I'm afraid this is going to belong to a different 'department', not to single-note ornaments (but remember me about this every now and then...)

  5. Now about position. Am I right in assuming that:
    • Signs just before or after the note are drawn in the space or on the line same as the note is, except for the 'comma' which goes across the line?
    • Signs just above or below the note go into the space above or below, regardless of the position of the note?
    • In the latter case, what to do if there is another note rightly above or below?

    Of course, it will make sense to define this detail mostly once the signs to consider will be identified.

I still have to peruse the reference text you posted; possibly I'll find there some of the answers. Anyway, many thanks again for the info!

In reply to by Miwarre

Hi Miwarre, as I'm also very interested in improving the baroque lute (and lute) functions in musicscore, I try to answer some of the questions.
It is very difficult to say, which ornament means which playing.

In the whole I would say that a right bow/hook, right comma mostly means the same: appoggiatura from above, perhaps also trills from above (that depends strongly on the different writers). The same is with the bow/hook from left or below that mean an appoggiatura from below, but also were used for port de voix.

So here it would probably be enough to have a bow/hook from the left and from the right (the comma would be more apropriate for the Renaissance lute).

It would be good also to have a little x from the left and right (for trills or mordents, depending on the writer.
Also the sign for mordent would be good to be placed right (or left).
For the vibrato often a # or doubled one or something like the wiggleVibrato, but longer had been in use.

In the late baroque there were some printed sources, that have an overview on the then used ornaments. I attach the table by Beyer in his setting of the Gellert Oden.

If you have questions on the ornaments and the German words, feel free to ask.
Thank you for improving the (baroque) lute tablature.

Attachment Size
BeyerOrnaments.jpg 307.04 KB

In reply to by MLutz

BTW - the concept with the palette (in German: Gesamtpalette), that is show, if you type SHIFT-Z is very good. In symbols there are possibly all symbols that are necessary.

It would be good, if there would be a possibility in the dialogue to have the symbols placed right or left (other possiblities could also be useful) to a tablature sign; and also to be able to change the size. If now there was a new palette with the normally used lute ornaments (probably user configurable), that would ease up everything.

It's astonishing, what possibilities musescore already has out of the box! ;-).

In reply to by MLutz

MLutz: Hi Miwarre, as I'm also very interested in improving the baroque lute (and lute) functions in musicscore ....

Is there any central place (page here, forum topic, project) to talk about the implementation of historic tablature? How can I inform interested people about feature suggestions, bugs, patches et al.?

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