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Date: | Sat, 11 Feb 2017 15:30:46 +0100 |
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While one might think that the second and similar
bars could be notated with a triple dot, surely
in Mozart's time this would have had tempo and
accentuation implications of one beat per bar.
David
At 14:44 11-02-17, dc wrote:
>Le 11/02/2017 14:35, dc écrit :
>>https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/A_Dictionary_of_Music_and_Musicians/Dot
>>
>>His son, Wolfgang Mozart, not only made
>>frequent use of the double dot invented by his
>>father, but in at least one instance, namely at
>>the beginning of the symphony in D written for
>>Hafner, employed a triple dot, adding seven
>>eighths to the value of the note which preceded
>>it. The triple dot is also employed by
>>Mendelssohn in the Overture to Camacho's
>>wedding, bar 2, but has never come into general use.
>
>I just quoted this without checking. But looking
>both at the manuscript and the published score,
>I only see double dots at the beginning (though
>Mozart *could have used a triple dot*, instead
>of the half note tied to a double-dotted quarter
>he writes). Perhaps Andrew has other examples.
>
>Dennis
>
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