ECOLM - An Electronic Corpus of Lute Music
Basic TabCode - rhythm signs
A rhythm sign, where present, is the first element of a tabword. Generally the symbol above the stave refers to a standard musical rhythm sign. These signs may each be encoded with a single letter:
B | = Breve | ||
W | = Semibreve (Whole note) | ||
H | = Minim (Half note) | ||
Q | = Crotchet (Quarter note) | ||
E | = Quaver (Eighth note) | ||
S | = Semiquaver (Sixteenth note) | ||
T | = Demisemiquaver (Thirty-second note) | ||
Y | = Hemidemisemiquaver (Sixty-fourth note) | ||
Z | = Semihemidemisemiquaver (Hundred-and-eigth note) |
Note: As with pitch symbols, tablature rhythm-signs indicate relative durations rather than absolute. However, shorter note-values being easier to represent graphically than longer, in the sources one often finds music that at first sight appears to be much faster than it is.
- Dotted notes are indicated by simply adding a . after a rhythm
indicator, so a dotted crotchet is represented as
Q.
- A fermata may take the place of a rhythm signs in tablature
and, in this case, should be encoded as
F
- Tuplets and beamed notes present some complications and are dealt with in their own sections.