Moving On

• May 17, 2010 - 04:47

So, I'm in a Music Theory class and I used what I learned to make this while breaking a ton of rules I was told not to break. I called it Moving On because when I heard it, it made me think of getting over something bad that happened, redemption, or making a resolution of some sort. It's just a short thing that I might work off of.
It's written in F# minor because that's my favorite key on the guitar. I wrote it for harp, only because piano was really buggy and wouldn't let me input notes, but I intended it for piano, so when listening to this, go to Display then Mixer and change the sound to piano if you're able to.

Attachment Size
Moving On.mscz 2.81 KB

Comments

You mention that you found piano "really buggy". Could you give details so that others can understand and reproduce what you were experiencing? Be sure to mention which version of MuseScore you are using and what operating system you are on.

with WSTF44GRAND
and sinfon36.sf2

I see you used 4 different voices, 2 for the G ket and 2 for the F key.
You could use only two, the 1 and the 2 on the G key and the F key.

If you put this at 62 bpm it sounds really nice, more of a somber piece like that than what you say it is now. I almost get a jaunty vibe at 120 bpm.

Do you still have an unanswered question? Please log in first to post your question.