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Tim, regarding your notation experiment, it looks good to me, but I found myself unsure which was easier to read. Then I started thinking that the tab readers would read the tab, and the standatrd notation readers would read that. So why waste space on the page when only one version is being used? I guess for comparison purposes, but how many people would be doing that? Oh, I don't know...In the case of the yellow book it takes out all the guff, so that's a good thing!
That's better. What do those two dots mean: Corn Shucking Jig, penultimate bar, first two notes - a pull off with two dots? I see you have ignored the dots, which is probably the best solution. They look deliberate, though.
Boston Jig...
The 'P' is a conundrum. In Buckley's 1860 Book, where this comes from, he starts out by typing the full word 'pull' Cf.page 13, 'Exercise in two-four time', whcih I assume is a confirmation that the curved slur line means pull off. In the next piece he starts that way but later omits the slur, just using the word pull. Looking further into the book, sometimes he uses 'pull' on its own, sometimes a slur line on its own, and sometimes both. The 'pull' gets shortened to a 'p'. I wish he had been more consistent!
So, my question to you, Tim, is, do you really need to continue with the confusion? It looks like a slure line and 'p' mean different things, but I'm not sure they do. Or am I missing something (again!)?
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