If you're producing a jazz lead sheet (as the "swing" indicates), you're wrong.
\tempo "Swing" 4=125
Merely indicates that the *style* is Swing while the tempo is 125. You could also write \tempo "Swing" 4=200 Which would indicate that this is a swing piece of tempo 200.
Jazz tempo indications don't work like classical ones where a tempo name also implies a certain (narrow) range of bpm. Best, Rob
______
Don't ask me who's influenced me. A lion is made up of the lambs he's digested, and I've been reading all my life. -- Giorgos Seferis
That's not exactly what I want.
"\tempo "Swing" 4=125" seems to mean "the tempo is Swing which
correspond to 4=125". Whereas what I want is 2 different independent
indications. The same result but without the parenthesis for
example.
Maybe the \tempo command is not the command to use in this case. But
I didn't find another way to have an indication once in the score
and in each part.
Anton Curl
On 20/03/2015 09:36, Craig Dabelstein
wrote:
Hi Anton,
Can't you do:
\tempo "Swing" 4=125
Or is that not what you are looking for?
Craig
On Fri, 20 Mar 2015 at 17:59 Anton Curl
< address@hidden>
wrote:
Hi everyone!
I'd like to put an indication displayed in all the parts but
only once
in the score, like a tempo mark.
I found this syntax:
\tempo \markup { "swing" }
But at the same place in the score, I already have a \tempo
command:
\tempo 4=125
\tempo \markup { "swing" }
c
And Lilypond ignore the second.
What do I have to do to display both indications?
Thanks
Anton Curl
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