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1.2.6 Special rhythmic concerns
Grace notes | ||
Aligning to cadenzas | ||
Time administration |
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Grace notes
Grace notes are musical ornaments, printed in a smaller font, that take up no additional logical time in a measure.
\relative { c''4 \grace b16 a4( \grace { b16 c16 } a2) }
There are three other types of grace notes possible; the
acciaccatura – an unmeasured grace note indicated by a slurred
note with a slashed stem – and the appoggiatura, which takes a
fixed fraction of the main note it is attached to and prints without the
slash. It is also possible to write a grace note with a slashed stem,
like the acciaccatura but without the slur, so as to place it
between notes that are slurred themselves, using the
\slashedGrace
function.
\relative { \acciaccatura d''8 c4 \appoggiatura e8 d4 \acciaccatura { g16 f } e2 \slashedGrace a,8 g4 \slashedGrace b16 a4( \slashedGrace b8 a2) }
The placement of grace notes is synchronized between different staves. In the following example, there are two sixteenth grace notes for every eighth grace note
<< \new Staff \relative { e''2 \grace { c16 d e f } e2 } \new Staff \relative { c''2 \grace { g8 b } c2 } >>
If you want to end a note with a grace, use the \afterGrace
command. It takes two arguments: the main note, and the grace
notes following the main note.
\relative { c''1 \afterGrace d1 { c16[ d] } c1 }
This will place the grace notes after the start of the main note. The point of time where the grace notes are placed is a given fraction of the main note’s duration. The default setting of
afterGraceFraction = 3/4
may be redefined at top level. Individual \afterGrace
commands may have the fraction specified right after the command
itself instead.
The following example shows the results from setting with the
default space, setting it at 15/16
, and finally at
1/2
of the main note.
<< \new Staff \relative { c''1 \afterGrace d1 { c16[ d] } c1 } \new Staff \relative { c''1 \afterGrace 15/16 d1 { c16[ d] } c1 } \new Staff \relative { c''1 \afterGrace 1/2 d1 { c16[ d] } c1 } >>
The effect of \afterGrace
can also be achieved using
spacers. The following example places the grace note after a
space lasting 7/8 of the main note.
\new Voice \relative { << { d''1^\trill_( } { s2 s4. \grace { c16 d } } >> c1) }
A \grace
music expression will introduce special
typesetting settings, for example, to produce smaller type, and
set directions. Hence, when introducing layout tweaks to
override the special settings, they should be placed inside
the grace expression. The overrides should also be reverted
inside the grace expression. Here, the grace note’s default stem
direction is overridden and then reverted.
\new Voice \relative { \acciaccatura { \stemDown f''16-> \stemNeutral } g4 e c2 }
Selected Snippets
Using grace note slashes with normal heads
The slash through the stem found in acciaccaturas can be applied in other situations.
\relative c'' { \override Flag.stroke-style = #"grace" c8( d2) e8( f4) }
Tweaking grace layout within music
The layout of grace expressions can be changed throughout the music
using the functions add-grace-property
and
remove-grace-property
. The following example undefines the
Stem
direction for this grace, so that stems do not always point
up, and changes the default note heads to crosses.
\relative c'' { \new Staff { $(remove-grace-property 'Voice 'Stem 'direction) $(add-grace-property 'Voice 'NoteHead 'style 'cross) \new Voice { \acciaccatura { f16 } g4 \grace { d16 e } f4 \appoggiatura { f,32 g a } e2 } } }
Redefining grace note global defaults
The global defaults for grace notes are stored in the identifiers
startGraceMusic
, stopGraceMusic
,
startAcciaccaturaMusic
, stopAcciaccaturaMusic
,
startAppoggiaturaMusic
and stopAppoggiaturaMusic
, which
are defined in the file ly/grace-init.ly
. By redefining them
other effects may be obtained.
startAcciaccaturaMusic = { <>( \override Flag.stroke-style = #"grace" \slurDashed } stopAcciaccaturaMusic = { \revert Flag.stroke-style \slurSolid <>) } \relative c'' { \acciaccatura d8 c1 }
Positioning grace notes with floating space
Setting the property 'strict-grace-spacing
makes the musical
columns for grace notes ’floating’, i.e., decoupled from the non-grace
notes: first the normal notes are spaced, then the (musical columns of
the) graces are put left of the musical columns for the main notes.
\relative c'' { << \override Score.SpacingSpanner.strict-grace-spacing = ##t \new Staff \new Voice { \afterGrace c4 { c16[ c8 c16] } c8[ \grace { b16 d } c8] c4 r } \new Staff { c16 c c c c c c c c4 r } >> }
See also
Music Glossary: grace notes, acciaccatura, appoggiatura.
Notation Reference: Scaling durations, Manual beams.
Installed Files: ‘ly/grace-init.ly’.
Snippets: Rhythms.
Internals Reference: GraceMusic, Grace_beam_engraver, Grace_auto_beam_engraver, Grace_engraver, Grace_spacing_engraver.
Known issues and warnings
A multi-note beamed acciaccatura is printed without a slash, and looks exactly the same as a multi-note beamed appoggiatura.
Grace note synchronization can also lead to surprises. Staff notation, such as key signatures, bar lines, etc., are also synchronized. Take care when you mix staves with grace notes and staves without, for example,
<< \new Staff \relative { e''4 \bar ".|:" \grace c16 d2. } \new Staff \relative { c''4 \bar ".|:" d2. } >>
This can be remedied by inserting grace skips of the corresponding durations in the other staves. For the above example
<< \new Staff \relative { e''4 \bar ".|:" \grace c16 d2. } \new Staff \relative { c''4 \bar ".|:" \grace s16 d2. } >>
Please make sure that you use the \grace
command for the
spacer part, even if the visual part uses \acciaccatura
or
\appoggiatura
because otherwise an ugly slur fragment will
be printed, connecting the invisible grace note with the following
note.
Grace sections should only be used within sequential music expressions. Nesting or juxtaposing grace sections is not supported, and might produce crashes or other errors.
Each grace note in MIDI output has a length of 1/4 of its actual
duration. If the combined length of the grace notes is greater than the
length of the preceding note a “Going back in MIDI time
”
error will be generated. Either make the grace notes shorter in
duration, for example:
c'8 \acciaccatura { c'8[ d' e' f' g'] }
becomes:
c'8 \acciaccatura { c'16[ d' e' f' g'] }
Or explicitly change the musical duration:
c'8 \acciaccatura { \scaleDurations 1/2 { c'8[ d' e' f' g'] } }
See Scaling durations.
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Aligning to cadenzas
In an orchestral context, cadenzas present a special problem: when constructing a score that includes a measured cadenza or other solo passage, all other instruments should skip just as many notes as the length of the cadenza, otherwise they will start too soon or too late.
One solution to this problem is to use the functions
mmrest-of-length
and skip-of-length
. These Scheme
functions take a defined piece of music as an argument and generate a
multi-measure rest or \skip
exactly as long as the piece.
MyCadenza = \relative { c'4 d8 e f g g4 f2 g4 g } \new GrandStaff << \new Staff { \MyCadenza c'1 \MyCadenza c'1 } \new Staff { #(mmrest-of-length MyCadenza) c'1 #(skip-of-length MyCadenza) c'1 } >>
See also
Music Glossary: cadenza.
Snippets: Rhythms.
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Time administration
Time is administered by the Timing_translator
, which by
default is to be found in the Score
context. An alias,
Timing
, is added to the context in which the
Timing_translator
is placed. To ensure that the
Timing
alias is available, you may need to explicitly
instantiate the containing context (such as Voice
or
Staff
).
The following properties of Timing
are used
to keep track of timing within the score.
-
currentBarNumber
The current measure number. For an example showing the use of this property see Bar numbers.
-
measureLength
The length of the measures in the current time signature. For a 4/4 time this is 1, and for 6/8 it is 3/4. Its value determines when bar lines are inserted and how automatic beams should be generated.
-
measurePosition
The point within the measure where we currently are. This quantity is reset by subtracting
measureLength
whenevermeasureLength
is reached or exceeded. When that happens,currentBarNumber
is incremented.-
timing
If set to true, the above variables are updated for every time step. When set to false, the engraver stays in the current measure indefinitely.
Timing can be changed by setting any of these variables
explicitly. In the next example, the default 4/4 time
signature is printed, but measureLength
is set to 5/4.
At 4/8 through the third measure, the measurePosition
is
advanced by 1/8 to 5/8, shortening that bar by 1/8.
The next bar line then falls at 9/8 rather than 5/4.
\new Voice \relative { \set Timing.measureLength = #(ly:make-moment 5/4) c'1 c4 | c1 c4 | c4 c \set Timing.measurePosition = #(ly:make-moment 5/8) b4 b b8 | c4 c1 | }
As the example illustrates, ly:make-moment n/m
constructs a
duration of n/m of a whole note. For example,
ly:make-moment 1/8
is an eighth note duration and
ly:make-moment 7/16
is the duration of seven sixteenths
notes.
See also
Notation Reference: Bar numbers, Unmetered music.
Snippets: Rhythms.
Internals Reference: Timing_translator, Score.
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