Clefs' Volumes
sorry for posting again, i just couldnt find the answer anywhere....
simply put, i want one clef to have higher volume than the others. they are all piano clefs so the mixer doesnt help.
sorry for posting again, i just couldnt find the answer anywhere....
simply put, i want one clef to have higher volume than the others. they are all piano clefs so the mixer doesnt help.
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Comments
The mixer would not help a potential performer neither and this is the goal of a sheet music.
You can use dynamics to achieve this. Drag and drop a suitable dynamic from the dynamic palette to the staff, right click on it -> MIDI properties -> choose staff
In reply to The mixer would not help a by [DELETED] 5
Thanks again.
im also new to music so i dont really understand this stuff.
In reply to Thanks again. im also new to by HolyEyE
I have seen so many questions on this forum posted by people who obviously know next to nothing about Music Theory. For example, the concept of voices on a staff. Maybe it would be useful to have some links to a few music theory pages on the web so these people could read before using Musescore.
I am sure there are many people who are keen to use Musescore to enter a score from printed music but not aware of the technicality of voices, staffs, dynamics, tempo, ties, slurs and so on.
Charles
In reply to Some music theory training is needed to use Musescore by ozcaveman
It's possible to have many years of practical music experience, and to have read a fairly comprehensive introduction to music theory, without having come across this use of "voice". For example, "The AB Guide to Music Theory Part I" by Eric Taylor, which has been a standard British text book since 1989, does not mention "voice" except as a translation of "voce" (as in viva voce) or "voix". It does have examples of notation which would require the use of Voices within MuseScore. It also includes mentions of relatively rare notation such as cross-bar beaming, so it's not that Voices are too advanced to get a mention - more, I think, that the concept was not particularly relevant to most people before music notation software came on the scene.
I do, however, agree that links to music theory pages would be helpful to many people.
In reply to ... the concept of voices ... by Jon Foote
Wikibooks has a free collaborative book for music theory : http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Music_Theory
In reply to Wikibooks has a free by [DELETED] 5
It needs a lot of work, but it's a wiki, so we can go over there and contribute. I just put in a paragraph on lead sheet notation.
-- J.S.
In reply to Wikibooks has a free by [DELETED] 5
thank you for the intersting comments.
and i could certainly learn from the wiki.