----- Original Message -----From: Ivaylo NaydenovSent: Tuesday, November 13, 2012 2:48 AMSubject: Re: [MNP] Hummingbird notationToo complex IMHO.
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Too complex IMHO.
Blake,Yes, I saw Hummingbird on VexFlow, referenced by a post to the Music Notation Project forum.Also on LessonUp.I think the folks at MNP, musicnotation.org; musicn...@googlegroups.com, would love to hear your thoughts.If you don't mind, I'll post your reply there!I've been trying to find an "easier" way to learn piano for several years, and stumbled on some alternative notations.I even have one of my own, detailed on my Music blog at DrTechDaddy.comI'm actually a computer guy, and I've been working--off and on--on techniques to create "music notation" with standard office and web software,partly because I didn't like the high prices of score editors like Finale, but more because I didn't like their limitations and clumsy document model and user interface.But there is "free" open-source system called LilyPond that is adaptable to alternative notations.So I'm very curious about VexFlow as well.So far, it seems that it treats the score as a "graphics" object, like most score editors,rather than as a text object, which is what I'm trying to do.I'm intrigued by your observation that students recognize symbols better than spatial relationships.But I gather that you are also preparing your students to read traditional notation,and may not be ready for a radical departure into a 12-position staff or beat-based rhythm notation.One question: some of the trace lines have a "hook" at the end; I didn't see an explanation for that in the legend, but it seems to be related to "dots".Joe AustinOn Nov 12, 2012, at 8:41 PM, Blake West wrote:Hey Joe,Thanks for getting in touch. I assume you mean the post from the VexFlow google group? The advantages comes from a few things.- The pitch symbols that are paired with extremely easy/intuitive mnemonics (see the legend in the PDF that was linked in the post). This unifies the clefs (no need to learn treble and bass separately), and also makes recognition much easier even for notes that are a few ledger lines off the staff.- Rhythm symbols intuitively show how long your holding the note. Currently rhythm symbols are arbitrary and make no real sense.- Sharps/Flats are also changed to be more intuitive. Sharps are connected to the note and point up with a "plus" sign. Flats point down.All of these changes come from my experience as a teacher and seeing certain problem recur again and again. Kids have shockingly little spatial reasoning ability until they seem to be about 11 or 12. That makes reading traditional notation very frustrating for them. This is important because kids are deciding whether they want to keep playing music before they're 11 or 12. And feeling like "they can do it" is key in that decision.Yet, despite their lack of spatial reasoning, their symbol recognition abilities are great (they're usually reading by 5), so I figured adding symbols would help, and my tests with kids have borne that out. Even adults usually have better symbol recognition than spatial reasoning, so it's easier for them too. Other changes like sharps and flats, ties and dots, and such are also based on specific problems I kept seeing with students.I could go into more details, but I'll leave it at that. What's your background Joe?On Mon, Nov 12, 2012 at 5:18 PM, Joe Austin <DrTec...@gmail.com> wrote:From: Joe Austin <DrTec...@gmail.com>
Subject: Hummingbird Notation
Message Body:
Saw a post on Hummingbird Notation,
and am just curious.
What is the rationale? Advantage?
Btw, you might be interested in
http://musicnotation.org/
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Blake WestFounder, Teacher at LessonUp
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Hey Paul,Thanks for bringing me into the group!
I was aware of shape note notation before creating Hummingbird, though I can't say it was a direct influence. I didn't even know what the shapes looked like, I kind of just had heard it existed. Also, what we found in initial testing was that shapes alone are nice, but not really that effective on their own, because they're still abstract and have no good "hook" to the note. It's all about the right shape with the right mnemonic. That's what we had to spend time getting right.
And to Seth who asked about our original non-standard staff system. I dug up an old illustrator file we'd made, and took a screenshot (attached). Noteheads are a bit different than what we have now. As you'll see, the point was to make it so each note was always in a unique spatial position that also was the same across octaves. While it was novel to us when creating it, I'm pretty sure it's not a unique design (Triple space, line, double-space, line. Repeat).
And yeah, we'd actually love to have help bringing Hummingbird to Lilypond. We had looked into it, and it seemed like getting our glyphs into Metafont would be a huge bitch, and it was unclear (and leaning towards no) that Lilypond was capable of drawing rhythm lines at conditional lengths (ie. if the measure is spaced out further, than the whole note line should be drawn longer). Hence why we were interested in VexFlow. But if you know things we don't... please get in touch. I'd love to get even some rough and tumble translation software happening.
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Michael
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Yeah handle it same way traditional does by moving things just beside each other.
From my mobile
Alphabet clef is cool. Notice that b and f look the same in terms of being in between lines though. What we went for with our take was getting that symmetry across octaves while also being clear through unique positioning.
From my mobile
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Well just be clever with your native tongue to come up with good mnemonics for the symbols. Do they use fixed do in Bulgaria? If so, then, we'd need to find a D word for our Customers symbol. So, for example, are there any D words that mean "curve" or "crescent" or perhaps "moon" or something like that?
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