Writer-friendly Gregorian notation format compiling to gabc.
One or more scores per file; generate pdf preview without need to write a single line of LaTeX code; write music and lyrics separately.
GLY is an acronym of "Gregorio for liLYponders" or "Gregorio with separate LYrics.
One of the most popular solutions for typesetting square notation used for the Gregorian chant is Gregorio.
Gregorio is a great tool, but I really don't like it's default input format gabc - it's not very well readable, pain to write, and too restrictive (for some reason doesn't support other than the predefined header fields). That led me to designing an alternative, Gregorio-inspired notation format, which compiles to pure Gregorio gabc.
(Existence of the GABC Transcription Tool by Benjamin Bloomfield suggests that the author of gly wasn't the only one who prefered to enter music and lyrics separately.)
gly language
- music separated from lyrics
- no need of the ubiquitous and tedious parentheses
- music transcription is usually quicker and more comfortable
- separation of "material and form" -> easy copying of the music or lyrics alone is possible (useful for a composer)
- syllabified lyrics entered in a format inspired by LilyPond
- music and lyrics can be interspersed as needed
- no semicolons in the header
- custom header fields
- several scores per file
gly tool
- transform your gly document to one or more gabc scores
- compile pdf preview with a single command, without writing
any (La)TeX
- produces score annotations from provided score header fields
- transform gly document to (modern notation) lilypond document
- WIP Antiphonale according to the 1983 Ordo cantus officii
- Proper Divine Office chants of Bohemian Premonstratensian houses
Typical GABC source of an antiphon looks like this:
name: Nativitas gloriosae;
office-part: laudes, 1. ant.;
occasion: In Nativitate B. Mariae Virginis;
book: Antiphonale Romanum 1912, pg. 704;
mode: 8;
initial-style: 1;
%%
(c4) NA(g)TI(g)VI(g)TAS(gd) glo(f)ri(gh)ó(g)sae(g) * (,)
Vír(g)gi(g)nis(hi) Ma(gh)rí(gf)ae,(f) (;)
ex(f) sé(g)mi(h)ne(h) A(hiwji)bra(hg)hae,(g) (;)
or(gh~)tae(g) de(g) tri(g)bu(fe/fgf) Ju(d)da,(d) (;)
cla(df!gh)ra(g) ex(f) stir(hg~)pe(hi) Da(h)vid.(g) (::)
Corresponding GLY may look like this:
\score
name: Nativitas gloriosae
office-part: laudes, 1. ant.
occasion: In Nativitate B. Mariae Virginis
book: Antiphonale Romanum 1912, pg. 704
mode: 8
initial-style: 1
c4 g g g gd f gh g g ,
g g hi gh gf f ;
f g h h hiwji hg g ;
gh~ g g g fe/fgf d d ;
df!gh g f hg~ hi h g ::
NA -- TI -- VI -- TAS glo -- ri -- ósae *
Vír -- gi -- nis Ma -- rí -- ae,
ex sé -- mi -- ne A -- bra -- hae,
or -- tae de tri -- bu Ju -- da,
cla -- ra ex stir -- pe Da -- vid.
Or, with music and lyrics interlaced (this arrangement may be handy for larger scores, like full-notated hymns, sequences or nocturnal responsories):
\score
name: Nativitas gloriosae
office-part: laudes, 1. ant.
occasion: In Nativitate B. Mariae Virginis
book: Antiphonale Romanum 1912, pg. 704
mode: 8
initial-style: 1
c4 g g g gd f gh g g ,
NA -- TI -- VI -- TAS glo -- ri -- ósae *
g g hi gh gf f ;
Vír -- gi -- nis Ma -- rí -- ae,
f g h h hiwji hg g ;
ex sé -- mi -- ne A -- bra -- hae,
gh~ g g g fe/fgf d d ;
or -- tae de tri -- bu Ju -- da,
df!gh g f hg~ hi h g ::
cla -- ra ex stir -- pe Da -- vid.
Other arrangements are also possible. Order of music and lyrics is actually ignored during processing.
Score begins with a \score
keyword.
Header fields follow. The header syntax is very similar to gabc,
except for semicolon at the end (omitted in gly) and the fact that
only one-line values are supported.
Unlike in gabc, there is no delimiter signaling end of the header.
Header ends with first line detected as music or lyrics.
Music lines contain only music. There is usually no need to enclose music chunks in parentheses (the author's bias against writing so many parentheses was one of the main motivations behind creating gly), but you are allowed to write them if you want to.
Lyric lines contain lyrics, with syllables separated by double dash
--
like in LilyPond.
For more detailed description of gly syntax see Syntax Reference below.
Install Ruby (some 2.x version) runtime. Then install as any ruby gem:
gem install gly
If you plan to use gly preview
,
ensure that you have a working installation of gregorio
and
lualatex
.
If you also plan to use the gly->lilypond translation, install the lygre gem. (This feature is currently only for the brave. But better support is planned.)
This gem provides executable gly
. Run gly help
for full list
of subcommands. The most important ones are:
gly gabc FILE1 ...
converts given gly file(s) to one or more gabc files (one per score, i.e. one gly may spawn a bunch of gabcs).
gly preview FILE1 ...
creates a pdf document with all scores contained in each gly file.
Emacs mode with syntax highlighting for gly
Gly syntax is line-based. The interpreter reads the input line by line, and depending on context it interprets each line as e.g. music, lyrics or header field.
The syntax is quite permissive, not requiring a lot of delimiters or hints for the parser concerning what each line means. Mostly the parser guesses the meaning correctly. Where not, meaning of each line can be stated explicitly.
When a %
sign is encountered, everything until the end of line
is considered a comment and not interpreted.
(Comment syntax is the same as in gabc.)
Please note, that when compiling to gabc, comments are dropped and don't appear in the resulting gabc file.
Empty lines are ignored.
A new score begins at the beginning of a file or at a line containing a single keyword '\score'.
It consists of a header (optional, only permitted at the beginning of a score) and music- and lyrics-lines. Lines with music and lyrics may appear in any order.
Score ends with end of file or with explicit beginning of a new score or another top-level element.
Score header starts at the beginning of the score and ends with first non-empty line identified by the parser as music or lyrics. Like in gabc it is optional - you aren't required to include header in a score.
Header consists of fields. Each header field is on it's own (one) line and consists of identifier, colon and value:
name: Nativitas gloriosae
office-part: laudes, 1. ant.
occasion: In Nativitate B. Mariae Virginis
book: Antiphonale Romanum 1912, pg. 704
mode: 8
initial-style: 1
Header field identifier may only consist of alphanumeric characters, minus-sign and underscore. Value can contain anything.
Header field 'id' is special: if present, it is used as suffix of the generated gabc file (instead of the default, which is numeric position of the score in the source document).
Syntax of lyrics is inspired by LilyPond.
Lyrics have to be manually syllabified. Default syllable delimiter
is double dash (minus) --
with optional whitespace around.
cla -- ra ex stir -- pe Da -- vid.
Underscore can be used to enter a "joining" space, to set two or more words under a single note/neume. Some languages, like Czech or Italian, use this feature. The underscore will be replaced by a space in the gabc output.
Pán s_vá -- mi.
The parser guesses meaning of each line by attempting to find syllable separator in it and by looking if it's alphanumeric characters contain something that cannot be interpreted as music. If any of these conditions is met, the line is interpreted as lyrics.
If gly fails to guess your lyrics line correctly and interprets
it as music, place \lyrics
or it's shorter form \l
at the beginning
of the unhappy line:
\l a a a
For the opposite case there is \music
and it's shortcut \m
.
\m a[alt:když něco poplete autodetekci] j ivHG
\lyrics
or \music
alone on it's own line starts a lyrics/music
block mode. It means that until the next block opening keyword
is encountered (\lyrics
, \music
, \header
, \score
),
default line meaning is lyrics/music.
Again, this is handy mostly when gly fails to guess your intentions.
In case you prefer another syllable separator over the default
double dash, there is a command line switch --separator
or -s
for this purpose. However, setting a custom syllable separator
can have tricky consequences due to the way how gly guesses
meaning of lines.
Any line appearing in a score and not identified as header field or lyrics is music by default.
Music line contains one or more music chunks separated by whitespace. For music syntax see official gabc documentation - gly doesn't change anything in this respect.
Music chunks may be enclosed in parentheses as in gabc. That is especially useful in two cases:
- empty music chunk
()
- music chunk containing space
(gf gf g!hi)
When processing the gly source and producing gabc, music chunks are matched to lyric syllables.
There are, however, a few special cases, to make it work conveniently:
These special cases of music chunks don't get lyric syllable:
- clef
- music chunk containing only a division bar
(eventually accompanied by a line break
z
orZ
)
Exception to this rule are 'nonlyrical lyrics chunks'.
Currently there is only one built-in nonlyrical lyric chunk:
asterisk *
.
Normally it is treated as any other syllable,
but if it meets a division, it is set as it's lyrics, while
a normal syllable wouldn't be.
If you need to set some other syllable under a division,
make it 'nonlyrical' by placing
an exclamation mark at it's beginning, e.g. !<i>Ps.</i>
In the other direction it is sometimes necessary to set a syllable
not matching any music at all. In such cases empty music chunk
()
is what you need.
Explicit empty lyrics syllable can be produced by a lone exclamation
mark !
. It is sometimes handy when gly
doesn't recognize
a non-singable music chunk.
Between scores (and only between scores) you can use one-line
\markup My annotation
and block
\markup
My annotation
when I plan it long
markup. gly preview
will insert the content of your
markups into the tex document it generates.
Markup is inserted as is - just with the \markup
keyword +
leading and trailing whitespace stripped.
It means you can use TeX commands and other constructs
that make sense in a TeX document.
Each gly document may optinally contain a document header. It may appear anywhere in the document, but best practice is to place it at the very beginning.
Document header starts with keyword \header
and ends
at the end of file or at the beginning of another top-level element.
The syntax of it's content is the same
as for score header.
\header
title: Hebdomada III Adventus
Field 'title' in the document header is, if present,
used by gly preview
as title of the generated pdf.
For quick transcription or composition the default output of
gly preview
is possibly good enough. But what if you want to
customize the output? Switch font, fine-tune page geometry,
use custom headings? No problem! gly
understands your desire
for beautiful music sheets.
The easiest way to customize the overall look-and-feel
of your gly preview
s is a custom LaTeX template.
normally it would be a valid LaTeX document prepared for gregorio (i.e. compatible with lualatex, importing all the necessary packages) and containing two placeholders:
{{glyvars}}
in the preamble - it will be replaced by several LaTeX command definitions making available for you contents of the document header fields{{body}}
in the document body - it is where scores will be inserted.
The double curly braces tell gly "this is a placeholder" - the placeholder format is borrowed from popular templating engines.
See the default template for inspiration.
Render a preview with your fancy new template by invoking
gly preview -t TEMPLATE.tex DOCUMENT.gly
execute tests/run.rb
MIT