weird triplets
Hi All,
I don't know how to produce the result as in attached picture.
Thanks in advance for your advice,
Attachment | Size |
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Capture.JPG | 38.51 KB |
Hi All,
I don't know how to produce the result as in attached picture.
Thanks in advance for your advice,
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
Capture.JPG | 38.51 KB |
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Comments
They are not really weird - see https://musescore.org/en/handbook/3/tuplets. Start by entering just four straight semiquavers of that group - B A G F. Then delete the G to leave a rest. Select the rest and use Ctrl+3 to leave you three rests where you can input the notes you want.
In reply to See https://musescore.org/en… by Brer Fox
But that F is apparently part of the triplet
In reply to See https://musescore.org/en… by Brer Fox
Hmm, maybe it is not, the triplet bracket otherwise would include the head of that F
Hit Ctrl+3 on the first note of the triplet group and then enter the subsequent two notes of the triplet. For more details, see: https://musescore.org/en/handbook/3/tuplets
This looks like a typo to me. Almost certainly the triplet is just the thirty-seconds. That's an extremely common rhythm - it's really just a written-out mordent. Super common in Baroque music as well as jazz.
In reply to This looks like a typo to me… by Marc Sabatella
Hi all,
I cannot find the way to add this X-tuplets using Add --> Tuplets --> Other.
It's the beginning of Verdi's "Va pensiero" in the "Nabucco", see attachment.
Five semiquaver in a frame of six-tuplets ???
Thanks,
In reply to Hi all, I cannot find the… by Trottolina
That is one quaver rest plus 4 semiquavers in a sextuplet not five semiquavers.