Re: how to make it like this
Reply #16 –
That is the purpose of the "Continue Prior Ending" button in the special ending dialogue box. Simply place a special ending at the start of each bar that you need the line to continue over and click that button for each. It would be best to select "Closed Ending" on the last one too.
Use a tie from the last F in the first bar to connect to the F in the second bar. Delete the words "Steal_a_way" from the lyrics. I know this is slightly different to the PDF as it doesn't show the tie you need to add. Nevertheless, adding the tie is the correct answer, the PDF is technically wrong.
You are dealing with the natural decay of the piano patch. It is not an organ which will hold the note. When you strike a note on a real piano, even if you hold the key down or press the sustain pedal, the note will still decay. The patch is designed to mimic this.
If you change the patch to, say, any wind instrument, or a vocal patch, or an organ, or a string instrument, the decay won't happen.
They follow the normal rules of music.
These exceptions are specific to NWC:
- No decorated barlines within a special ending as they terminate the special ending.
- Section Close barlines can derail the flow logic (as we discovered yesterday)
- If you use flow control (DS, DC etc) and you need to include a special ending as part of the flow, you must include a Default Ending) directive in the special ending to be played
- DC and DS directives can ONLY use a single Default Ending directive as master repeat logic prevents repeats from happening after a DS or DC*, until a Coda is reached, when the repeat logic is reset to normal for the coda.
* This correctly follows traditional practice. Unfortunately a lot of "modern" practice, especially in jazz, includes doing the repeats again after a DC or DS directive. NWC cannot do this directly, though creative use of special endings and text representations of DS, DC etc. flow controls can emulate this. The late RickG was an absolute genius at making this work.