Prevent "duplicate" notes from being much louder

• Mar 6, 2012 - 13:23

I'm writing some choir scores for practice. Sometimes the tenor and the bass, for example, touch in on the same notes and during playback these are then played back twice(?) as loud which causes the song to sound rather weird in my opinion. Is there a way to make them... not sound like that?


Comments

In reply to by Jojo-Schmitz

That would result in silence if I wanted to listen to only one of the voices through muting in the mixer. I use this for practicing my voice and share it with others in the choir so they can use it for that as well. If I set velocity of "duplicate" tenor notes (I'm a bass), then a tenor would get silence if they listened to just their voice.

In reply to by Jojo-Schmitz

My understanding is that this sort of effect is caused when a synthesizer tries to plays the same exact wave form twice at the same time. So another fix might be to set the two voices to use different sounds.

Another option is to simply have to copies of the score - one with the doubled notes muted so it plays back well when played normally, and another with all notes at regular velocity to be used when soloing one part.

In reply to by Svish

I find using strings (violin, viola, cello, bass) works well. Sounds more like voices than a piano does, anyhow - real sustain.

I don't think Fluidsynth (the engine responsible for musescore's playback) has special facilities to avoid this basic synthesis issue, but you might try playng with ontime offsets in nte properties so the notes aren't actually simultaneous.

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