Moving whole sections up/down one octave
This one piece of music I've been messing with is causing me (and you) no end of trouble. Having copied it all in from the handwritten version, I now find whole chunks of it need moving up an octave. Someone has already explained to me how to do this with one note, but one note at a time will take forever. Is there a way of moving a range of selected bars up or down, please?
PS I think a mistake occurred during the transposition round about bar 27, but I'll look at that later.
Attachment | Size |
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Dance_of_the_Nuts.mscz | 25.49 KB |
Dance_of_the_Nuts.mscz | 25.49 KB |
Comments
Select the range of notes/measures and press Ctrl+up.
See:
https://musescore.org/en/handbook/3/selection-modes#range-select
Thanks. I knew that worked on one note. It never occurred to me it would work on a range. Job now finished, thank goodness! Thank you to everyone who helped with a number of difficulties.
In reply to Thanks. I knew that worked… by rhban
FWIW, as a new user exploring MuseScore almost 10 years ago after being a Finale user for well over 10 years before that, discovering this feature was one of the things that helped me decide I was never going back to Finale.
In reply to FWIW, as a new user… by Marc Sabatella
Finale was already an existing and usable software back in 2000?!
Just found out the initial release of Finale was in 1988, wow!
In reply to Finale was already an… by Howard-C
I believe the first version I used was 3.something in mid-90's, and it definitely imporved greatly in the years since. But even by 2010, I am pretty sure selecting a region and transposing it an octave was a far more awkward affair than in MuseScore. Not sure if it's any better now.
Before Finale, I used Notator for the Atari ST, which I and others here have very fond memories of. They got many things "right" that others are still only just starting to catch up with. But I can't remember how selection or transposition worked, can't say if this particular action would have been any easier.
In reply to I believe the first version… by Marc Sabatella
.