+An alternative way, which may be clearer if the notes in the
+voices are widely separated, is to place a @code{\relative}
+command at the start of each voice:
+
+@example
+\relative c' @{ noteA ... @}
+<<
+ \relative c'' @{ < noteB noteC > ... @}
+\\
+ \relative g' @{ noteD ... @}
+>>
+\relative c' @{ noteE ... @}
+@end example
+
+Let us finally analyse the voices in a more complex piece of
+music. Here are
+the notes from the first two bars of the second of Chopin's
+Deux Nocturnes, Op 32. This example will be used at later
+stages in this and the next chapter to illustrate several
+techniques for producing notation, so please ignore for now
+anything in the underlying code which looks mysterious and
+concentrate just on the music and the voices -- the
+complications will all be explained in later sections.
+
+@c The following should appear as music without code
+@lilypond[quote,ragged-right]
+\new Staff \relative c'' {
+ \key aes \major
+ << % Voice one
+ { c2 aes4. bes8 }
+ \\ % Voice two
+ { aes2 f4 fes }
+ \\ % No voice three
+ \\ % Voice four
+ {
+ % Ignore these for now - they are explained in Ch 4
+ \once \override NoteColumn #'force-hshift = #0
+ <ees c>2
+ \once \override NoteColumn #'force-hshift = #0.5
+ des2
+ }
+ >> |
+ <c ees aes c>1 |
+}
+@end lilypond
+
+The direction of the stems is often used to indicate the
+continuity of two simultaneous melodic lines. Here the
+stems of the highest notes are all pointing up and the
+stems of the lower notes are all pointing down.
+This is the first indication that more than one voice
+is required.
+
+But the real need for multiple voices arises when notes
+which start at the same time have different durations.
+Look at the notes which start at beat three in the first
+bar. The A-flat is a dotted quarter note, the F is a
+quarter note and the D-flat is a half note. These
+cannot be written as a chord as all the notes in a chord
+must have the same duration. Neither can they be written
+as sequential notes, as they must start at the same time.
+This section of the bar requires three voices, and the
+normal practice would be to write the whole bar as three
+voices, as shown below, where we have used different note heads
+and colors for the three voices. Again, the code behind this
+example will be explained later, so ignore anything you do
+not understand.
+
+@c The following should appear as music without code
+@c The three voice styles should be defined in -init
+@lilypond[quote,ragged-right]
+\new Staff \relative c'' {
+ \key aes \major
+ <<
+ { % Voice one
+ \voiceOneStyle
+ c2 aes4. bes8
+ }
+ \\ % Voice two
+ { \voiceTwoStyle
+ aes2 f4 fes
+ }
+ \\ % No Voice three (we want stems down)
+ \\ % Voice four
+ { \voiceThreeStyle
+ % Ignore these for now - they are explained in Ch 4
+ \once \override NoteColumn #'force-hshift = #0
+ <ees c>2
+ \once \override NoteColumn #'force-hshift = #0.5
+ des2
+ }
+ >> |
+ <c ees aes c>1 |
+}
+@end lilypond
+
+
+Let us try to encode this music from scratch. As we