NoteWorthy Composer Forum

Forums => General Discussion => Topic started by: seb on 2003-10-07 03:36 pm

Title: note values
Post by: seb on 2003-10-07 03:36 pm
Hi all.

I was wondering if it is possible to 'break' the music
notation laws within Noteworthy.
An example: and octave should be held during the entire
bar (with help of the pedal) while some floating chords
are playing on top of this octave. I know I can add
a pedal mark and hence achieve the right result sonically,
but I would like to be able to write the octave as whole
notes, and then add the others on top 'anyway'. As
soon as I make the octave into whole notes the other
stuff is pushed off to the right....

Can anybody please help me? :-)
-- Seb
Title: Re: note values
Post by: Robert A. on 2003-10-07 04:47 pm
Sounds like a problem that can be solved by staff layering.

NWC allows you to control the visibility and audibility of notes independently. You can create one staff with some notes that look one way but sound differently, then merge it with another staff. When you do that, the notes that print to paper can be different than the notes that sound when played as MIDI.
Title: Re: note values
Post by: William Bub on 2003-10-10 03:01 am
I believe you can do what you want without layering. If I understand correctly, you wish to place in, say, a 4/4 measure, a whole note, and also 4 quarter notes. Place the first note (either quarter or whole) and then, using ctl-enter, place the other note as a chord member. Then add the three additional quarter notes. If you want the the first quarter to be a rest, however, it must be placed before the whole note. Then, with the insertion point after the rest, place the whole note and press ctl-enter.
Title: Re: note values
Post by: William Bub on 2003-10-10 03:04 am
"placed before the whole note" means "prior to placing the whole note," not "in front of the whole note."
Title: Re: note values
Post by: David Palmquist on 2003-10-12 10:34 pm
Further to William's reply, if you use the quarter note and the whole note in the same chord, I think you have to enter the quarter note first.