
The other day I came across the Phantasy for Viola and Pianoforte by Benjamin Dale, and noticed the elegant markings he (or Lionel Tertis, the editor of the piece, or Schott, who published it in 1912) used to indicate which string particular pitches should be played on.

Here's a bit of detail:

These markings made immediate sense to me, and this is the way I plan on marking fingerings from now on. Pitches on the A string are pretty obvious for violists, so there is no reason for using a single line for the A string. Two lines indicate a pitch should be played on the D string, three lines indicate it should be played on the G string, and four lines indicate that the pitch should be played on the C string. The lines are always below the finger number, and they act like icons that lead directly to location without the need of translation (or more numbers).
4 comments:
That's pretty cool. Perhaps it was inspired by the idea that violists shouldn't be expected to be able to read Roman numerals! Kidding, of course :) ...but it is a cool system.
My edition of the Ysaÿe violin sonatas (Schirmer) uses similar notation. It would be interesting to learn where it originated!
I think Edward Tufte would like to see this elegant way to represent information without ambiguity.
Three comments by three Michaels (and only two are related to me)! I just checked the 1924 Schott Edition of the Ysaye Sonatas,
http://imslp.org/wiki/6_Sonatas_for_Solo_Violin,_Op.27_%28Ysa%C3%BFe,_Eug%C3%A8ne%29
and saw the markings there too. Schott is the publisher of the Dale, so the practice might have started with Schott. Schott didn't use them in their 1909 edition of the York Bowen Suite or their 1910 editions of Drdla, so the Dale might have been among the first pieces they used this notation in.
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