Playing of Legato

• Sep 16, 2024 - 08:52

Two, stuck on one line, notes - the second note, like the first note, is played with an attack, i.e. the LEGATO does not work! How to solve this problem?


Comments

In reply to by karolcpm

With any dynamics, Legato does not work! And it would be strange if it were different, for this, apparently, is a defect in the program!
This is especially noticeable on Plucked instruments!
Where to write to the developers so that they correct this? - In this state of the program, it is impossible to use it to create musical audio files, but only as a graphic editor of notes!

In reply to by AV-BelCanto

As you know, the purpose of any notation software is produce notation. Many of the staff text elements do not work yet.
Consider that in Sibelius there are different sound sets for different styles of playing. There is the normal string sound (for example). Then there is a legato sound set. As well as a vibrato-legato sound set. There is also and overall note length setting. And in several instruments, if you slur across several notes, the phrasing works. None of which MU4 has.

However, I found a solution to the problem: so that the notes located on the same line are played related, you need to stick them with not the key S, but the key T, on the keyboard!

In reply to by SteveBlower

But this is strange, - any musician knows that if the crammed notes are located on the same line, then the second note is the continuation of the first! It was enough to introduce this algorithm in the program!
Two legato options only make excess complexity and confusion!

In reply to by AV-BelCanto

They are not two legato options. They are completely different things. They just look the same.

A tie extends the duration of the first note by the duration of the next note. it can only be used with two notes of the same pitch.

A slur can be interpreted in many ways but usually indicates a smoother transition between slurred notes than between un-slurred notes. A slur connecting two notes of the same pitch generally means that the second note is articulated but not as strongly as without a slur. Such a usage of slurs is not very common and can be ambiguous. But a player can usually distinguish between tied notes and slurred notes of the same pitch by the context. Muesescore can't or doesn't rely on the context in such cases and therefore, to have the appropriate playback, the appropriate symbol must used; a tie to extend the duration without re-articulation, a slur to extend it with re-articulation.

Look it up in any basic music theory book.

In reply to by SteveBlower

I know that in Sibelius there is also a special league to merge two notes of one height, but in the theory of music I have not met this, especially since all the leagues look the same - there is no special legato!
The fact that you describe, apparently, a computer specificity that is designed to make the program correctly reproduce the league notes of the same tone, and distinguish them from league notes of different heights.

In reply to by SteveBlower

Yes!
I simply suggest explaining to the program that in order to play tied notes of the same pitch, you need to add their durations, i.e. so that you don’t have to press the T key for this, but so that the program does this automatically, like any musician!
But in its current form, the T key does just that - it explains it to the machine!

In reply to by AV-BelCanto

I am not understanding your point. In 4/4 a duration of a beat and a half can be written as a quarter tied to an eighth or as a dotted quarter or as an eighth tied to a quarter. Which notation to use depends on context. If the note starts on beat 1 a dotted quarter would be the most usual practice, but if the note starts in beat 2 then a quarter tied to an eighth would be more usual. If the note starts on the half beat of beat 1 an eighth tied to a quarter would be most usual. However, in particular cases the less usual grouping might be more appropriate. What exactly are you suggesting the program should do that would avoid the use of the T key.

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