A Phantom DC al Coda?

• Aug 27, 2022 - 05:02

Could someone tell me why when I play this chart at the end of the B section it returns to the top and starts over rather than going on to the C section? There is no DS, DC... repeat sign...
It is a lead sheet that I downloaded...

I thank you in advance!!!!!

Jeff
Springfield MO

Attachment Size
Easy Living Sketch Score Concert F.mscz 60.16 KB

Comments

Try this one: Easy Living Sketch Score Concert F2.mscz

In your score, measure 19 had a bunch of D.C. 's and D.S.'s from which the text only was deleted, leaving a "phantom" jump behind which was honored during playback.
Clicking on a nearby element and then holding down the Alt key while using the right/left arrow keys and observing either the Status bar or the Inspector allowed the hidden jumps to be discovered and deleted.

In reply to by bluewisp1955

I want to explain the procedure in more detail because it is not self-explanatory.
If you have found the jump mark with ALT+arrow key, then press 'Alt-Shift-E' to enter the edit mode. Type any letter(s) and leave the edit mode, e.g. by using Esc. This newly written text is already seleceted, so press simply 'delete'.

In your score there have been several jump instructions in measure 19, so you have to repeat the above procedure several times. Unfortunately the letters itself had been removed, not the jump mark at all.
Important: Make sure the whole string is selected, not just the letters. Otherwise it leads to the result that the marks are still there an working, but not visible and not (easily) changeable.

In reply to by bluewisp1955

Hi Jeff, I'm not 'Hilde', just a nick name - the 'K' is part of my first name :-) - but doesn't matter ...

As I learned in the meantime, deleting the text string is not the cause of the problem. This has apparently not been clarified, one suspects that it could have come from an import from another program.

Anyway, after finding the invisible jump labels, pressing the delete button should be sufficient to remove them. In your file, however, there were six (!) such phantom jumps in measure 19 so this steps must be repeated six times! That confused me a little.
Another hint for this case I learned too: If you've found such a phantom jump choose 'select all similar elements', set in the inspector the 'Frame' to 'Circle' or 'Rectangle' and you can see all empty markers and delete them.
Greetings from Germany ...

@bluewisp...
You wrote:
It is a lead sheet that I downloaded...

Was this download a MuseScore (.mscz) file, or was the lead sheet of some other format (like musicxml) which you subsequently "imported" into MuseScore?
It would seem quite unusual (but not impossible) for a musescorer to have added a mixture of six different D.C.'s/D.S.'s and then delete only the text strings on each, turning them into "phantoms".

In reply to by HildeK

From the messed-up stem directions and the link given in the Score Properties, it seems pretty apparent to me this score came from another program entirely and was then imported into MuseScore via MusicXML. So very possibly, whatever went wrong, it wasn't the result of editing within MuseScore, but may have happened long before it was ever opened in MuseScore.

In reply to by Marc Sabatella

Thanks Marc,
I downloaded it from the MuseScore library, but who knows where it originated. I am very much a "user" of MuseScore and appreciate its simplicity/ease of use and its capability. But, I have absolutely no skill beyond being a musician who uses it for scores and lead sheets, so very much appreciate the continual support!

Jeff
Springfield MO

In reply to by bluewisp1955

Marc
Also....
Thanks for pointing out the messed up stem directions. Every other week my jazz combo hosts a different vocalist, so sometimes function triumphs over form to get some lead sheets cranked out ASAP before the next gig. But, I do like my sheets to be legible and the notation correct, so thanks!
jeff

In reply to by bluewisp1955

You're welcome! Any time I import a score from MusicXML, first thing I do is Ctrl+A to select all, Ctrl+R to reset (almost) everything to defaults. Here, you've probably made other manual adjustments you want to keep, but maybe consider thing: Ctrl+A to select all, press Notes in the Inspector to limit selection to just the notes, then forcing the "Stem direction" back to Auto. Since some stems directions are forced one way and others are forced another way, this can make it awkward to change them all at once, but sometimes the easiest way to do this is to change first to Up, then Down, then Auto.

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