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Re: Musical conlangs (was: Poetique)

From:Costentin Cornomorus <elemtilas@...>
Date:Sunday, January 11, 2004, 18:53
--- Ray Brown <ray.brown@...> did screeve
and scrawl:

> Very few, if any, auxlang designers seem to > have even considered this,
Hm, [not that we want to get into Auxlang policies and similar] but oughtn't this be part and parcel of any good auxlang design?
> >> 11. At night at sea one could fire colored > >> flares according the colors given in (10). > > > > That's a load o flares! > > Quite so. I'm not whether all these 13 methods > are > due to Sudre himself or whether some of them > are the > result of Gajewski's enthusiasm and vivid > imagination. > I suspect the latter.
The very fact that he put this much creative thought into ways of communicating his language says something for his imaginitive abilities!
> While some are certainly practical, others are > IMO rather bizarre - and this is one such.
Well, perhaps not so bizarre as all that. Solresol was invented around 1817 or so - there were no radios, barely any steam ships. Intership communications consisted pretty much of semaphores, flares and shouting.
> > Add a few more notes, and the ships organist > > could strike up a merry tune! > > yeah - but don't forget all those darn pauses > :)
Heh.
> >> 13. Finally, at sea, can beat a drum, strike > a > >> bell, blow a whistle, blow > >> a hunting horn (cor de chasse [on a > boat??]), > > > > Not ideal, as a cor de chasse does not have > easy > > access to a diatonic scale! > > But ain't the French 'cor de chasse' sort of > curly > and rather different from the hunting horn used > in > the anglophone world?
Yeah. Your English hunting horn is a straight sort of affair, the French one is generally, well, French horn shaped. Without all the valves and extra plumbing. This latter became the natural horn, found in early orchestras, and was later fitted with valves, becoming the French horn.
> > This will have to implemented in the World, > somewhere! > > Well, at least in someone's conworld :)
The more the merrier! Padraic. ===== la cieurgeourea provoer mal trasfu ast meiyoer ke 'l andrext ben trasfu. -- Ill Bethisad -- <http://www.geocities.com/elemtilas/ill_bethisad> Come visit The World! -- <http://www.geocities.com/hawessos/> .

Replies

Andreas Johansson <andjo@...>
Peter Bleackley <peter.bleackley@...>