Thank you for trying out the program! The command REPEAT=n
is a new feature that's available in the upcoming version which I am final-testing and planning to release tonight. I apologize, I should have waited before updating the online manual. If you update to the new version from here, you won't have the problem you're having now. I'll be interested in hearing your final product! :)
I am a big fan of John Carter's reduction: https://www.sheetmusicdirect.com/en-US/se/ID_No/336948/Product.aspx
It is from this collection: https://www.amazon.com/Collected-Works-John-Carter/dp/B007MW6F1C
If you don’t already have it, I might suggest this one as an excellent alternative. :)
This album is the same label as the Discogs page and is listed as ADD, so is likely old enough to be that recording, though I have no way of knowing if this is the same recording you seek.
Ah, that makes sense then. Amazon allows you to see the first few pages and it looks like it's just a reprint of the Breitkopf edition that doesn't include fingerings.
What benefits does it have over the mainstream theory books (eg Benward & Saker )? They also have a CD and analyzed examples from art music in their books. The only difference I see is your "harmony roll", which looks pretty much like other midi stuff I've seen before and, no offense, but doesn't look like it would be particularly useful.
Not to mention that the example you included either includes error or demonstrates that you're some non-standard system of roman numeral analysis (which wouldn't seem to be terribly helpful to learners). (I'm referring to the "II" for the f# chord [would be ii in standard analysis] and the VII7 [which would be a vii^o ^6/5 in standard analysis].)
This one is biographical, but my favorite is The New Bach Reader, which integrates primary sources from throughout his entire life, before and after. Receipts, newspaper articles, court proceedings, original manuscripts, contemporary accounts, etc. Really a wealth of resources for understanding his time period and life, as well as some lovely pictures of his manuscripts.