12 Note Arpeggio in One Beat
Hello,
I am trying to write a twelve note arpeggio in one quarter beat. How do I do that using the Musescore software?
Thank You!
Hello,
I am trying to write a twelve note arpeggio in one quarter beat. How do I do that using the Musescore software?
Thank You!
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Comments
Select the quarter note or rest and use [Add]>[Tuplet]>[Other]. The in the "ratio" boxes put 12 in the first box and in the second the division of the quarter beat that you want to use for the displayed note lengths, so for 12 x 1/8ths put 2 in that box, for 12 x 1/16ths put 4 in that box, for 12 x 1/32s put 8 in that box etc.
See https://musescore.org/en/handbook/3/tuplets#custom-tuplets
In reply to Select the quarter note or… by SteveBlower
That's more of a cadenza, isn't it?
In reply to That's more of a cadenza,… by Jojo-Schmitz
"That's more of a cadenza"?
No, it's a 12-tuplet.
In reply to "That's more of a cadenza"?… by SteveBlower
a 12-let pretending to be a cadenza or vice vers. Not an arpeggio
In reply to a 12-let pretending to be a… by Jojo-Schmitz
These are arpeggios - both of them.
The first one makes it clear that it is to be played as 12 equal notes in one beat - nothing cadenza-like about it, the second one is less specific about note lengths and whether the notes are held after being played and is possibly less easy to read - certainly less easy for a non-chordal instrument player who is unlikely to be used to having chords in their part.
Take a look at the ABRSM scales and arpeggios books and you will see that arpeggios there are always written out.
In reply to These are arpeggios - both… by SteveBlower
Only the 2nd one is called arpeggio though, that wiggly line
In reply to Only the 2nd one is called… by Jojo-Schmitz
I should revise my earlier comment. The first example is an arpeggio. The second example is an arpeggiated chord. The wiggly line is an arpeggio sign or more properly an arpeggiated chord sign. The first makes sense for single note and chordal instruments; the second only for chordal instruments. A clarinettist could not play the second example.
You could also do it by dividing the quarter note into 4 sixteenth notes and using CTRL + 3 to make 4 sixteenth note triplets, which is the same length as 1 quarter note 12-tuplet.
Enter a chord of (a quarter duration and) 12 notes, then use the arpegio from the corresponding palette