Jens M Andreasen wrote:
> On Tue, 2010-04-13 at 00:55 +0100, James Morris wrote:
> > A string of note-ons following each other all for the same pitch n without
> > any intervening note-offs for pitch n, IS PERFECTLY ACCEPTABLE provided
> > they are INTENTIONAL and NOT accidental.
>
> Yes, except for that this is an absurdity that could only happen by
> accidental programming.
Are you trying to assert that absurdities (and accidental programming)
do *not* happen quite often in music? ;-)
To quote from the GS standard:
| Address: 40 1x 14, Parameter: ASSIGN MODE,
| 0 = SINGLE, 1 = LIMITED-MULTI, 2 = FULL-MULTI
|
| Single: If the same note is played multiple times in succession, the
| previously-sounding note will be completely silenced, and then the new
| note will be sounded.
|
| LimitedMulti: If the same note is played multiple times in succession,
| the previously-sounding note will be continued to a certain extent
| even after the new note is sounded. (Default setting)
|
| FullMulti: If the same note is played multiple times in succession,
| the previously-sounding note(s) will continue sounding for their
| natural length even after the new note is sounded.
|
| * ASSIGN MODE is the parameter that determines how voice assignment
| will be handled when sounds overlap on identical note numbers in the
| same channel (i.e., repeatedly struck notes).
IIRC the XG standard has a similar parameter.
Regards,
Clemens
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Received on Tue Apr 13 12:15:03 2010
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