Notation: Slurs with little lines at initial/end points
Does anyone have a definitive explanation from a publisher or authoritative source regarding such a slur (or at least personal experience)?
For example:
The extract from which this was drawn also utilizes slurs without these small lines, and so it seems not to be equivalent to a regular slur's usage according to the composer/publisher.
As an educated guess, I would say it adds emphasis to legato-style playing so that the performer glues or holds the notes in-between -- akin to using multiple voicing to notate precise over-lapping of notes in a simpler way, though this may be completely off the mark.
{syntaxhighlighter SPEC}Chordially{/syntaxhighlighter}
Comments
Most likely: It is used to indicate that it was added by the editor, not found in the original.
In reply to Most likely: It is used to by Ziya Mete Demircan
Thanks for responding.
I've also read on-line one positing the meaning of a single line through a slur (usually through the middle) is actually of the opposite effect: the editor is suggesting the slur ought not to be there without fully removing it.
Who to believe these days? x_-