Some people apparently don't like some notation.
I wonder if this is a particularly American thing - as taught in some music colleges there - or general.
"Rules" such as imaginary bar lines seem to feature.
I personally do not like ties much, so in the example shown here I might prefer the second bar in each line shown with the dotted notes, rather than the ties, but I wonder if this "rule" is generally followed.
Perhaps in 4/4 musicians who are used to reading music may find the ties easier, and there is an argument that it's easier for sight reading.
Perhaps it would be most appropriate to ask percussionists and drummers what they would like. My argument is that if the notation makes sense it's up to the performer to get the rhythm right, rather thn follow some conventions/rules about publishing notation - but maybe I'm wrong. What happens if the time signature is changed to something else - say 7/8 - I have seen scores with dotted bar lines put in, but don't most composers just expect performers to sort it out, either by practice or in rehearsal?
Publishing conventions which hold up - perhaps for valid reasons in 4/4 - may just not hold for music in other time signatures.
I wonder if this is a particularly American thing - as taught in some music colleges there - or general.
"Rules" such as imaginary bar lines seem to feature.
I personally do not like ties much, so in the example shown here I might prefer the second bar in each line shown with the dotted notes, rather than the ties, but I wonder if this "rule" is generally followed.
Perhaps in 4/4 musicians who are used to reading music may find the ties easier, and there is an argument that it's easier for sight reading.
Perhaps it would be most appropriate to ask percussionists and drummers what they would like. My argument is that if the notation makes sense it's up to the performer to get the rhythm right, rather thn follow some conventions/rules about publishing notation - but maybe I'm wrong. What happens if the time signature is changed to something else - say 7/8 - I have seen scores with dotted bar lines put in, but don't most composers just expect performers to sort it out, either by practice or in rehearsal?
Publishing conventions which hold up - perhaps for valid reasons in 4/4 - may just not hold for music in other time signatures.
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