Update : ground on your feedback , Pop Chart science laboratory has made some tweak to the poster — check them out at the tie below !
Do you discombobulate your demisharps with your duple flats ? Have you block how to spell an inverted mordent ? Do n’t know how to read that grace note at the recital ? Do you still discreditably call a caesura “ railroad tracks ? "
Not anymore ! Pop Chart research laboratory ’s latest poster is bursting with melodious mark that will make instrumentalist of all stripes tremolo with joyfulness , bend after inverted twist . Even genus Viola players have reason to celebrate : the chart even throw the maligned alto clef some much - deserved love .

you could see a big version of the posterhere .
" The researcher on this project has a music hypothesis setting , " the team pronounce , " and , at some point over the course of years of chart - making , realized that the globe of melodic notes and St. Mark was one of highly - varied and extremely - nuanced visual data — i.e. ,something as small as a lilliputian dot or arc can drastically shift the way that a melodic short letter is meant to be interpreted and then produce into hearable euphony . So the goal was to chart these little hieroglyph by type and placement . "
According to the team , the design was " like a plot of melodious sudoku — we knew on a give way stave that certain chemical element had to be let in , but the trick was finding the sodding sequence and making sure that symbolic groups ( like accidentals and dynamics ) were presented in a style that ( mostly ) made sense . "

Now that deserves an ovation !