Newbie questions
Hello
I have import a big midi file in MS (From the New World of Anton Dvorak)
- MS has automatically assign instrument to my tracks, most of them are correct but there are a few mistake, how can I correct this
- As it is a symphony the page is not long enough to see all the tracks, how can I solve this
- I would like to see only one track
Thanks in advance for your help
Best
Cyril
Comments
some attempt with "Part extraction":
http://musescore.org/en/handbook/part-extraction
In reply to You could do by Shoichi
Hi Shoichi
I have seen this, not a very good solution !
In reply to Right click on a stave, stave by Jojo-Schmitz
Mixer may have the "show solo"?
In reply to Right click on a stave, stave by Jojo-Schmitz
Hi Jojo
Many thanks
1) Great !
2) I have specify in page format size A1 and now I can see all my staves
3) This is not very nice, in Logic you double click on a stave and it is opening it in a new window !
I have an exercise for you ;o) I have try to figure it out !
On my violin stave from bar 1868 to 1705 I want the violin to play Pizzicato
How I do it ?
Where is the tempo track ?
Many thanks again for your help
Best
Cyril
In reply to more questions by cyrilblanc
You need to realize MuseScore is a notation program, not a sequencer. As such, it behaves as notatin programs are expected to behave, not as sequencers do. The main reason a notatipn program would ever need to display only a single ataff is in preparation for printing that part, so that's how MuseScore does it. Also, since MuseScore is a notation progra,. Things like tempo changes and pizzicato are done using text markings - this is what is needed for a human musician reading the notated score, after all. So to change tempo, you create a tempo text. To change a sund to pizz, you create staff text with that direction, then right click to set its playback properties.
In reply to You need to realize MuseScore by Marc Sabatella
Hello Marc
Thanks for your answer.
So If I import a midi file, the tempo is lost ???
> To change a sund to pizz, you create staff text with that direction, then right click to set its playback properties.
On a score you don't have separate stave for each articulation changes, now I understand why you are so cold with using VSL as a player
> . The main reason a notation program would ever need to display only a single staff is in preparation for printing that part, so that's how MuseScore does it.
Sibelius 7 does it !
Even in Logic you can split your staves into groups, i.e. winds, brass, strings, .... and work on the groups of staves or on the stave and you can navigate into the different levels very quickly
What you are saying is ok for a small score ! Have you ever work on big orchestral score ?
I have tried to add notes at the beginning on my big score, it take forever !
Best
Cyril
In reply to I am disappointed by cyrilblanc
No, I don't think tempo is lost when you imoort a MIDI file - it gets imported as a series of invisible tempo markings, I believe. I have very little experience with this, so I don't know the details. But I do now thast MIDI is a very poor choice for interchange of information between notation programs. If there is any way for you to import a MusicXML file, that would be far, far better. You get way more information preserved. Think of MIDI as being optimized for performance, but MuiscXML for notation.
Regarding pizz, I didn't say to use a separate staff! I said to use a staff *text*. In other words, you enter the actual word "pizz" above the staff. That's what a human musician reading your score will expect, so that's that MuseScore expects. Once you've entered the text, you right click and set its playback properties as I said. You can then copy and paste that text anywhere you need it. In 2.0, it will be possible to then add that to your palette to facilitate future use.
I do work on orchestra scores quite often. It is true that currently MuseScore gets slower the bigger your score is. But at is more a function of length of score than number of instruments. So a common workaround is to break an especially long score into separate files. Anyhow, yes, this a known area for improvement, but it's a performance issue, not a functionality issue.
In reply to No, I don't think tempo is by Marc Sabatella
Hi Marc
Thanks
How do you get the bar number ? and how do you go to bar xxx ?
Best
Cyril
In reply to Hi Marc Thanks How do you get by cyrilblanc
The current bar number (assuming you have clicked a note or are in note entry mode) displays in the status bar at the bottom of the screen. Although if you care about bar numbers, you might simply want to turn on display of them on each bar or as you see fit - Style / General / Numbers.
Ctrl-F does a goto bar number.
In reply to I am disappointed by cyrilblanc
On a score you don't have separate stave for each articulation changes
Indeed, a violonist doesn't expect to read on a second staff when he plays pizz. More info about pizzicato in MuseScore http://musescore.org/en/handbook/change-and-adjust-sounds
You are often disappointed (VSL, midi import, big scores etc...), maybe you should lower your expectation. Sib 7 and Logic Pro are both commercial software, "maintained" by 2 huge public companies (Avid and Apple) for more than 25 years (in the 80s) and they cost several hundreds dollars. MuseScore is an open source project, lead by 3 guys, mainly developped by one (Werner) and helped by a large community of volunteers. MuseScore is free and really started in 5 years ago.
Of course, we really want to make MuseScore better, more usable and to adapt to more workflows... and we do value your feedback. We know it will take time, but in the past 5 yers, MuseScore went from 10 downloads a day and no release on windows and mac, to 5000 per day and the current MuseScore nightly with dozens of new features. We also believe MuseScore 1.3 is already quite good for most of the notation work and that it's also a great tool to learn about composition and music notation. There are lot of these works featured on http://musescore.com/sheetmusic
I hope it helps you understand what to expect and where MuseScore comes from.
In reply to On a score you don't have by [DELETED] 5
I did not say I was disappointed about midi import as it works much better than in Finale.
It is more intuitive too, you are on a good way.
MS has a lot of potential !
When you are ready I have propose my help with VSL
We are thousands users of Logic asking to drive player from articulation changes, but Apple does not listen !
In reply to I like MuseScore, it works better than Finale by cyrilblanc
https://www.vsl.co.at/en/211/1343/1348/2459/2116.vsl
In reply to more questions by cyrilblanc
see:
http://musescore.org/en/node/21784
----
To limit the pizzicato to some measures have to use a trick:
add another violin;
copy only the concerned measures (1868 to 1705);
Mixer / pizzicato;
hide empty staves.
As a test, give it a try in the nightly build, which is the development snapshot of the future MuseScore.
MIDI import is being greatly improved by GSoC student trig-ger. You can read about his development efforts at http://musescore.org/en/developers-handbook/google-summer-code/google-s…
As trig-ger is still on the job, any feedback is very welcome and has a chance to get incorporated for the next MuseScore version, i.e. 2.0
In reply to Nightly build by Thomas
I had a very good surprise to find in the setup that you have IAC ports as midi in It will be great to have iAC in Midi out !