Transposing from Alto sax to cello
I am struggling to modify a piece originally written for saxophone. I successfully transpose the first 3 staves including one for cello which puts the C instrument parts into D and the Bflat instrument parts into E. All fine. However, when it transposed the cello it leaves the clef as treble - also fine - BUT the notes are way too low using uncountable numbers of ledger lines. If I then select the notes intending to transpose them up an octave the key for ALL the parts is modified: C instruments from D to E and bflat from E to F#. This can't be right - all I have done is select a stave of notes. I haven't even been able to make the transposition. Any suggestions for circumventing this? I am going to try changing the clef.
Anyway - brilliant product, wonderfully helpful community.
Many thanks,
Struggling arranger.
Comments
Have you tried?...
For the cello staff (the one with all the ledger lines):
1. Select all the notes (only on the cello staff).
2. Press Ctrl + up arrow, to raise them one octave
Regards.
It pays to remember that, internally, MuseScore retains an absolute value for each note entered: for instance, “this note is C3.”
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Merely selecting notes will not cause them to change key. But there is an easily-overlooked toggle on the Score page: Concert Pitch.
MuseScore is aware of the customary notation conventions for different instruments. Therefore, if you are transposing from saxophone to cello, you should, probably first, highlight and copy the notes from the saxophone stave, then paste to a new one that you've created for cello, before adjusting them down by an octave or what-have-you. The default settings for a Cello stave will be those expected by cellists. Because the notes that are copied are absolute note-values (“C3”), they should copy-and-paste correctly, and be rendered correctly for that instrument. And, if Concert Pitch is off, they should now look as the instrumentalists will expect them to look.
I am not familiar enough with either instrument to say whether you will then additionally need to then transpose the Cello part to a new key, as noted earlier.
It sounds to me that you are doing something other than what you are describing. If you could upload a before and after score of what you have done it will make correcting your problem possible. Currently we can only wildly speculate.