Request for solid rectangular note head

• Jul 22, 2015 - 23:03

I do a lot of church music in an Anglican church. The Episcopal church uses a kind of long, black, rectangular note to indicate that all the words beneath it should be sung on that note. They look like this:

Page-from-The-Plainsong-Psalter.gif

It doesn't really matter what note value is given to these bars, probably they would be the equivilant of a whole note (breve).


Comments

If you click a note then bring up the Symbols palette (press Z), then search for "notehead". you'll see more noteheads you can apply as a symbol by double clicking. The "maxima" seems to be maybe what you want? I guess we don't support ntoe values that long internally, but conceivably could.

In reply to by Marc Sabatella

Yeah, I have used other noteheads and it is readable that way. I was just thinking that, since the long, rectangular note is standard in a chant, it might be something that could be added as an alternative notehead without too much trouble. The playback is not that important in this sort of case. You can't really playback chanted words effectively, anyway.

In reply to by Marc Sabatella

I did look for the brevis notehead, but I couldn't find it. Here is a screenshot of the Master Palette, Notehead window (Macintosh):

MasterPalette-noteheads.png

The second to last one (alt. brevis) Is the one I had already been using. Is that the one you were talking about?

Is there a way to add other noteheads?

By the way, thanks again for all your valuable input, Marc. You do a great job!

Typically in transcriptions of chant into modern notation it is the practice to use the Breve to indicate a reciting note.

Most of the time I write one note per word as it avoids confusion, but occasionally I do use a reciting note as in this....

https://musescore.com/churchorganist/scores/76795

This makes a clear distinction between the white reciting note and the black assigned notes, and fits better with traditional chant practice....
Tone2.PNG

In reply to by ChurchOrganist

Yes, I also use a breve in place of the long rectangular notehead. Actually, I use the retangular double breve, because it looks less like a normal note and so it alerts the singer that this one has a different meaning than a normal breve.
Nunc_Dimittis-sample.png
But I would like to be able to match the style that is used in my church (and most Anglican/Episcopalian churches in the USA), as well as in The Plainsong Psalter ( http://www.richardliantonio.com/anglican/The%20Plainsong%20Psalter.pdf ). And, since it seems to me that this would only be a matter of adding a new note head style, I think it would be a good addition to MuseScore. It is pretty clear from other comments that most people who want to write out chant and plainsong and finding MuseScore a bit frustrating.

In reply to by Jake Sterling

MuseScore 2 has much better chant support than MuseScore 1 did.

The split and join measures facility enables you to put together an unmetrical melody without having to continually resort to counting beats and entering them into the actual time signature for each bar.

There is still work to do - I would like to see support for the neumic notation found in traditional chant books.

But once you have grasped the principles, I think you will find MuseScore easier than most other score engraving applications.

Please let us know of any problems you come across - I work with chant in MuseScore on a regular basis, and have worked out how to deal with most of the problems involved - as an example the notehead used for the reciting note in my example above isn't the same as the actual note which is actually a semibreve. SO in this way you can manipulate the way the score looks from the way it actually plays back.

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