Alda's syntax for notes is heavily inspired by MML.
Western music theory divides pitches into repeating groups of 12 notes, e.g.
(ascending) c c# d d# e f f# g g# a a# b (next octave) c c# d
, etc. The
combination of the letter pitch (e.g. C#) and the octave determines the
frequency of the note in Hz. Octave is expressed as a number, typically between
1 and 7, corresponding to scientific pitch
notation. For example,
middle C and A440 are both in octave 4, which is the default octave in Alda.
Just like in MML, the octave is set separately from the notes themselves - i.e.
it's not "attached to" or "part of" the note, rather, each note looks at the
current octave in order to determine its pitch.
You can set the octave two ways:
o5
sets the octave to octave 5. Any integer can follow o.
<
decreases current octave by 1. >
increases current octave by 1.
Duration in Alda (as in MML) is typically expressed in note lengths from standard music notation, in number form. 4 is a quarter note, 2 is a half note, 1 is a whole note, etc.
Any number of dots can be added to a note duration, which has the same effect as in standard music notation - it essentially adds half of the note duration to the total duration of the note.
e.g.
2 = half note, 2 beats
2. = dotted half note, 3 beats (2 + 1)
2.. = double-dotted half note, 3-1/2 beats (2 + 1 + 1/2)
Note durations can also be added together using the tie syntax, ~
. (4~4
=
two quarter notes tied together, 2 beats total.)
Alda keeps track of both the current octave and the current default note duration as notes are processed sequentially in a score. Each time a note duration is specified, that duration becomes the new default note duration. Each note that follows, when no note duration is specified, will have the default note duration. At the beginning of each instrument part, the default octave is 4 and the default note duration is 4 (i.e. a quarter note, 1 beat).
-
A special feature of Alda is that you can use non-standard numbers as note durations. For example, 6 is a note that lasts 1/6 of a measure in 4/4 time. In standard notation, there is no such thing as a "sixth note," but this note length would be commonly expressed as one note in a quarter note triplet; in Alda, a "6th note" doesn't necessarily need to be part of a triplet, however, which offers interesting rhythmic possibilities.
-
Extending this concept, Alda allows for non-integer decimal note lengths.
For example,
c0.5
(or a double whole note, in Western classical notation) is twice the length ofc1
(a whole note).The numbers do not need to be powers of 2. For example,
c2.4
is valid. -
Alda also has an alternate way of specifying rhythms called a cram expression.
-
Note lengths can also be expressed in milliseconds and seconds, which can optionally be mixed and matched with standard note lengths:
c350ms # a C note lasting 350 milliseconds d2s # a D note lasting 2 seconds e2s~200ms # an E note lasting 2 seconds + 200 milliseconds f300ms~4. # an F note lasting 300 milliseconds + a dotted quarter note
A note in Alda is expressed as a letter from a-g, any number of accidentals (optional), and a note duration (also optional).
Flats and sharps will decrease/increase the pitch by one half step, e.g. C + 1/2
step = C#. Flats and sharps are expressed in Alda as -
and +
, and you can
have multiple sharps or multiple flats, or even combine them, if you'd like.
e.g. c++
= C double-sharp = D.
As an alternative to placing flats and sharps on every note that needs them, you may prefer to set the key signature, which will add the necessary sharps/flats to any note that needs them in order to match the key. See below for an example of using a key signature.
To overwrite the flat/sharp specified by a key signature, you can include an
accidental, i.e. -
or +
to make the note flat or sharp. You can also
override the key signature and force a note to be natural with _
, i.e. c_
is
a C natural regardless of what key you are in.
The following is a 1-octave B major scale, ascending and descending, starting in octave 4:
o4 b4 > c+8 d+ e f+ g+ a+ b4
a+8 g+ f+ e d+ c+ < b2.
Here is the same example, using a key signature in order to avoid having to include all of the sharps:
(key-signature "f+ c+ g+ d+ a+")
o4 b4 > c8 d e f g a b4
a8 g f e d c < b2.