Overdud
Is it possible with musescore to create an overdud on a music score including a slight change on the tempo (BPM)? Appreciate any information or advice you could provide on the subject.
Jerry at jdboone2002@yahoo.com
Is it possible with musescore to create an overdud on a music score including a slight change on the tempo (BPM)? Appreciate any information or advice you could provide on the subject.
Jerry at jdboone2002@yahoo.com
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Comments
https://musescore.org/en/handbook/tempo#tempo-marking and https://musescore.org/it/project/tempochanges
HTH
Hi Jerry.
What's an overdud?
In reply to Hi Jerry. What's an overdud? by xavierjazz
Overdue? (I hope I've understood).
Regards.
In reply to Overdue? (I hope I've… by Shoichi
An overdud is overlaying one recording on top of the first. Michael Tretow used this technique in ABBA recordings. The second recording is made at a slightly different speed. That provides for a fuller, richer sound.
My question is: can a second recording with a different speed be overlaid with MuseScore?
Jerry
In reply to Hi Jerry. What's an overdud? by xavierjazz
An overdud is a second recording on top of the first. It was a technique used by ABBA to provide a richer, fuller sound.
In reply to An overdud is a second… by jerryboone
Thanks. I know that as overdub.
In reply to An overdud is a second… by jerryboone
Might be a mistranslation. There is a term "overdub" (with a "b"), although usually that's a second recording that replaces the first, such as to fix an error. But it can indeed also be used to describe a second recording "on top" of the first. You don't need to do anything special to do this in MuseScore, since everything is added one staff at a time. Just add the staff, add the notes, and you're good to go. If you mean a literal second copy of the same notes, you can use copy and paste. If you don't want to see the notation but only hear it in playback, mark the part invisible in Edit / Instruments.