Notes in Guitar sheet music wont change at all
I am trying to write out guitar sheet music to turn into tab for a musician in a musical that I am a director for. In the score, I cannot change what note is being played at all after a certain point in the score and I do not understand why. Because I cant change the note or the string its being played on, I cant continue with making the sheet music readable.
Comments
Here is the score btw: Heather Guitar Book.mscz
In reply to Here is the score btw: … by Steel Bass Music
Huh?
You wrote:
In the score, I cannot change what not is being played at all after a certain point in the score and I do not understand why. Because I cant change the note or the string its being played on, I cant continue with making the sheet music readable.
Okay, I see 7 pages ending with a multimeasure rest of 864 measures. Press M if you want to continue writing into those 864 measures.
If it's something else, then...
Clearly articulate the problem.
Be specific about what you need.
In reply to Huh? You wrote: In the score… by Jm6stringer
Ope sorry. I wrote a typo. I can't change what string a note is being played on in the tab. it has a lot of rests because I'm going to add all of the songs into a single project to print easier
You wrote:
I can't change what string a note is being played on in the tab.
Okay... here's measure 10 copied from your score:
As you can see: "I can change what string a note is being played on in the tab", so it works just fine.
You need to be very specific about what you are doing - not use vague "after a certain point" statements.
Mention measure numbers, keystrokes you make, what happens, what you expect to happen.
Otherwise, see:
https://musescore.org/en/handbook/4/entering-and-editing-tablature-nota…
In reply to You wrote: I can't change… by Jm6stringer
I had labeled with text where it started, but I figured it out myself. I had copied the sheet music exactly, including the octave up marking, that meant I couldn't change it until I got rid of it and physically moved the note up an octave.