Hiding staves with hidden notes
Hi,
Can I hide a stave that contains hidden notes as if it was empty?
I have several places where I want notes to sound (for backing track purposes), but I dont want them to be visible. Is there a workaround so as to avoid have to make a new (hidden) part?
Thanks!
Uri
Comments
I, untick the 'visible' box for the instrument
In reply to I, untick the 'visible' box… by Jojo-Schmitz
Alas, I want the instrument to be visible in certain measures, where there are visible notes.
In reply to Alas, I want the instrument… by urisala
I need something akin to "hide empty measures" to include measures with hidden notes
In reply to I need something akin to … by urisala
I don't think there is a way, except for an additional part
In reply to I don't think there is a way… by Jojo-Schmitz
Ok, thanks for your help
In reply to Alas, I want the instrument… by urisala
FWIW, I do this all the time, using separate staves (instruments) for the visible and invisible. So, for instance, I'll have the drum part I use for notation (set to mute un the Mixer, or with notes set to not play in the Inspector), and the drum part I use for playback (set to invisible once I've entered the notes).
In reply to FWIW, I do this all the time… by Marc Sabatella
Thanks, Marc. I want to do this with the bass clef of piano lead sheet. I want a sample of the suggested bass chords to play, but not be visible.
I can add a second piano instrument and do this trick that way. It would be nice if there were a less cumbersome way to hide a staff even if it has notes that play.
Kind regards for all your work over many years!
Hello,
Reading the above comments, I just wanted to add a similar (identical?) use case. For most of a song, the bass piano part plays identical measures. I wanted to only show them on the first line, then have the staff hidden until the part changes just for a few measures, then hide them again.
It would indeed be nice to be able to do that without creating another instrument (if I'm understanding the workaround correctly.)
Thank you!