Exporting from Yamaha? Writing music? Help.

• Oct 20, 2013 - 15:19

Hi all. Love the musescore software (just started using it), but have a basic question I'm hoping someone can answer/jelp.

We have a Yamaha upright (U30 BL) with the disklavier installed (DKC-850). Not only does this allow us to play thousands of MIDI files (or pieces directly via internet--we have it hooked up to a WiFi), but also enables the capture of songs as we play. Many of you are likely familiar with this.

Anyway: my son (8 yrs old) played the attached piece, which I captured on the Dosklavier DKC-850, but for some reason after I imported it to musescore, it only gave me one clef (treble). Obviously, this makes reading the notes *much* harder.

For simplicity, if you look at the music (MIDI and PDF both attached here), you can see it is played around middle C, with constant chords in LH, and melody in the RH (sometimes above or below middle C).

HOW can I get the musescore to print this in a standard "Grand Staff" format with both Treble-and-Bass clef?

Thanks.

-- E

Attachment Size
AZ_001_PIANO051.mid 904 bytes
AZ_Halel.pdf 254.64 KB
AZ_001_PIANO051.mscz 6.09 KB

Comments

you can fix the score by right-click into the staff->split staff

in the futur 2.0 version MIDI Import has been greatly enhanced, you can check today by downloading a nightly build

In reply to by Jojo-Schmitz

Hi Jojo.
Thanks for super-fast response.
I do not see that option. I am using a Mac (but presumably same exact features) and opened the file, yet when I right click I dont see that option to staff-->split staff.

On left side of the window I see the Palette with all kinds of options, when I select Bass clef, it *replaces* the Treble clef entirely (and you can imagine what that looks like!). How do I get BOTH clefs?

Thanks again.

In reply to by phdezra

You have to right click the staff itself - don't put your mouse on the palette or on a note but on an empty place within the staff itself.

However, be aware that import of live playing almost never produces anything resembling readable notation. Unless the playing is very well synchronized to a click track (metronome), the resulting notation will be essentially gibberish. And I'm afraid that's the case here.

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