Notes Plugin Not working correctly
It seems like the notes are only working properly if you change the notes in the score.
Looks like it only does Treble Clef.
If the notes are in Bass Clef, then the Notes text is completely different.
Is there a way around that?
Comments
Use version 3 and see https://musescore.org/en/handbook/3/notehead-scheme
In reply to Use version 3 and see https:… by mike320
Thank you.
Is it possible to get the letters outside the notes as well?
I see it showing the wrong info as well. :(
I attached an image. where you can see it wrong and a part where its right
In reply to Thank you. Is it possible to… by pkappetein69
Maybe I'm missing something, but I'm not seeing where it's wrong? Both the noteheads and the text look right to me, unless I'm going blind. Did you use the plugin for the text?
In reply to Maybe I'm missing something,… by Marc Sabatella
I used the internal one (right click) and also the plugin. They both gave the same results.
If you look on the 1st Line. The note is a C, but it shows E ? Same on other spots. unless I am missing something here?
In reply to I used the internal one … by pkappetein69
I see an E on the bass clef there, not a C on the treble clef.
In reply to I see an E on the bass clef… by mike320
ok, maybe it's me.. (its been 15 years since i played keyboards again)
but if the note is a C, but it shows an E in it, what do I play? a C or an E.
cause it doesn't play right
In reply to ok, maybe it's me.. (its… by pkappetein69
On the bass clef, which is the clef you have for that note, play an E. When it treble clef play a C. The note names are accurate.
In reply to On the bass clef, which is… by mike320
Maybe a dumb question, but the program doesn't recognize that?
I should then be able to change the notes myself to the correct position (so i can just read it properly
In reply to Maybe a dumb question, but… by pkappetein69
It's still not what you are perceiving the problem to be. The note at the end oday the line is an E, not a C, and that's exactly what the text says. It would be a C if that were treble clef, but it is not - it is bass clef.
Perhaps you aren't familiar with how to read bass clef? The spaces are, bottom to top, A-C-E-G. If you do a web search you can probably find some good resources to help with learning to read music.
In reply to It's still not what you are… by Marc Sabatella
That's probably it.dont recall seeing this before years ago. (It probably was there, but didn't have any)
I was used to a=a c=c for the notes and the letters for the notes.
Now it can be shifted so I need to pay attention.
Guess as a "newbie" again I am thinking why not place the note up higher if it will sound the same and remove that other notation.
In reply to That's probably it.dont… by pkappetein69
The E on the bass clef is the E below middle C. The C on the treble clef is an octave above middle C. There are many other clefs used as well, you can see most of them in the advanced palette in MuseScore. The clef tells where a certain note is (treble wraps around the G above middle C, bass straddles F below middle C), then all other notes are relative to it. Treble and Bass clefs are by far the most common. Tenor and Alto clefs are rather common in classical music and the others (except tab and percussion) are rarely used today. The meanings of the symbols on TAB and percussion staves are far different than on the other staves.
MuseScore can be used as a tool for learning to read music. The status bar at the bottom left of the MuseScore window tells you the pitch of a note. C4 is middle C, C5 is an octave above, C2 is 2 octaves below and so forth. Octaves change on C. This should help you understand the relationship between notes a little better.
See:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clef#/media/File:Clef_Diagram.png
Guess there is more to it..
I have a Midi file, that looks fine in Musescore, but on my PSR 975 it shows something different.
If I play the notes from Musescore, it's real bad lol.. but playing it along on the keyboard it's fine.
I opened it in Cakewalk and it's showing correctly there.
I attached an image from both. so you can see the difference
Tried also Cubase, and it's showing correctly there too.
Musescore seems to be different.
In reply to Guess there is more to it… by pkappetein69
You probably have concert pitch turned off and an instrument that is not in the key of C in the MuseScore version.
In reply to You probably have concert… by mike320
Concert Pitch in Musescore?
Guess I don't know all of that.
I added a cut version of the Midi file. it's the Melody Line
In reply to Concert Pitch in Musescore?… by pkappetein69
How does this relate to the topic you've been discussing where the notes are not what you think they should be? This score doesn't even come close to the picture you showed. Upload the score with the picture of the staff with all of the clef changes and we could look at that and help you make sense of it.
In reply to How does this relate to the… by mike320
That is this midi file.
In reply to That is this midi file. by pkappetein69
I see now, it's just the last staff. You must have a transposition set in you other device then. When I import the midi, these are the concert pitch notes in the original picture. I can't see the comparison picture for A beautiful noise you showed.