You can write more than one chord on the same note.
Just select the note and press Ctrl-K again.
After you have written the new chord, press the esc key on your keyboard, then move it up or down with the arrow keys on the keyboard.
You can also define a custom text style to assign to your alternate chords so you can make them a different size as well as position. To create a custom text style, right click one chord symbol, Text Style, hit New, give it a name and change the properties as desired. Now you can user the Inspector to assign that style to any chords you like.
After years of famil with MS3, I realise that MS4 is the way forward.
Question: For piano, in the treble hand, I need a chord consisting of a quaver, PLUS two minims, the latter holding for the bar, and the quaver continuing with the melody.
How do I create a composite chord of notes of a different length?
Thank you Jojo.
Yes, I've found the 'voices' tab.
However, after years of scoring for a one-note instrument with MS3, now attempting to score for piano with MS4, experimenting with this tab simply changes all the notes in the chord - not merely the selected ones.
It must be frustrating for an expert to encounter such incompetence. But a little more detail would be very welcome.
Comments
You can write more than one chord on the same note.
Just select the note and press Ctrl-K again.
After you have written the new chord, press the esc key on your keyboard, then move it up or down with the arrow keys on the keyboard.
In reply to You can write more than one by Ziya Mete Demircan
"Just select the note and press Ctrl-K again."
Thanks, that was helpful!
You can also define a custom text style to assign to your alternate chords so you can make them a different size as well as position. To create a custom text style, right click one chord symbol, Text Style, hit New, give it a name and change the properties as desired. Now you can user the Inspector to assign that style to any chords you like.
After years of famil with MS3, I realise that MS4 is the way forward.
Question: For piano, in the treble hand, I need a chord consisting of a quaver, PLUS two minims, the latter holding for the bar, and the quaver continuing with the melody.
How do I create a composite chord of notes of a different length?
In reply to After years of famil with… by Clive68
Same as with any MuseScore version: by using voices
In reply to Same as with any MuseScore… by Jojo-Schmitz
Thank you Jojo.
Yes, I've found the 'voices' tab.
However, after years of scoring for a one-note instrument with MS3, now attempting to score for piano with MS4, experimenting with this tab simply changes all the notes in the chord - not merely the selected ones.
It must be frustrating for an expert to encounter such incompetence. But a little more detail would be very welcome.
In reply to Thank you Jojo. Yes, I've… by Clive68
All the dirty details are in https://musescore.org/en/handbook/4/working-multiple-voices
In reply to Thank you Jojo. Yes, I've… by Clive68
There's a lot to learn when writing for piano - voices are just part of it - but you may find this tutorial helpful:
https://youtu.be/IPluwNLI658