[goodfeel] Re: Brailling Percussion Parts

  • From: "Bill" <billlist1@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <goodfeel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 21 Jan 2014 09:57:28 -0500

Hi, Dani,

 

See the following entries on our GOODFEEL FAQ page:

 

Q. How do I enter percussion parts?

And

Q. What clef should I use for a part for drum set?

 

Page is found at:

http://www.dancingdots.com/main/gffaq.htm

 

Bill

 

From: goodfeel-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:goodfeel-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Elizabeth Heiserman
Sent: Tuesday, January 21, 2014 9:52 AM
To: goodfeel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [goodfeel] Re: Brailling Percussion Parts

 

Dani,

 

There is a whole chapter devoted to brailling percussion in the Handbook for
Braille Music from NBA. 

I will quote a bit of it here, but highly recommend you look into getting
this book. It has been very helpful for me in formatting music for analysis.

 

...percussion parts are usually printed in a score arrangement on one staff
or a system of staves or lines, and multiple copies of the score are given
to all of the players.

To transcribe such a score into braille, use a full open-score presentation
with a separate braille line for each instrument, even if several have been
printed on one staff. Align the measures vertically in a simplified
bar-over-bar format. Preserve the vertical arrangement of the print, with
the lowest note on the staff being brailled on the lowest line of the
parallel. Leave a blank line between parallels; two blank lines are not
necessary, as they would be in a typical ensemble score...

 

Hope this helps.

 

Betsy Heiserman

 

On Jan 21, 2014, at 8:41 AM, Dani L Pagador wrote:





Hi, Everyone.

Are percussion parts brailled separately i.e., each drum having its own line
in the piece, or together like chords? I've looked at the Braille Music Code
1997 and the DeGarmo book and haven't found anything to clarify this. I've
also looked for drum books on the BARD site and haven't found very many to
look at and cull for examples for how to format percussion music. Would
appreciate any input.

 

Thanks,

Dani

 

Thanks,

Dani  

 

Other related posts: