Timing and triplets 1997-12-11 05:00 am I've downloaded Noteworthy Composer 1.30b and was trying itout for a song my daughter wrote (with the help of her piano teacherand my wife) and I've run into a problem with the timing ofthe song. I'm not a musician, so please excuse any incorrectterms. The song is in 6/8 time and the first two measures in thetreble and base clef have 2 triplets and match up fine. Butin the next measure the triplets continue in the base clef, butthe treble clef has a quarter note, eighth note, then a dottedquarter note. Noteworthy Composer doesn't consider the Treble andbase clef to have equal timing. It seems like it is assigning3 beats to the quarter note in the measure instead of two whichis what all the musicians in the family have told me. They tellme that two triplets in a measure give the the 6 beats and thequarter note (2 beats), eighth note(1 beat),dotted quarter note(3 beats) for the 6 beats. It doesn't play the song correctlyas written, but I can change the notes to make it sound rightand line up the measures, but am told that isn't the way thesong goes. I've shown them the program and they like it butwill not consider it if it can't handle the above problem. Anyhelp would be appreciated.ThanksJoe Crossett Quote Selected
Re: Timing and triplets Reply #1 – 1997-12-11 05:00 am In 6/8 time, a dotted quarter is tyically considered "the beat", and two beats are present per measure. In this configuration, it is very unusual to see an actual notated triplet, as three adjacent 8th notes are played as triplets (since the beat is a dotted quarter). In NWC, the important thing to know about measure alignment is that the sum of the durations in a measure must be equal in all staff parts (for that measure). As long as you follow this rule, all parts should line up. If you are having trouble, feel free to send us a sample in an email attachment, and we will review it.- support@noteworthysoftware.com Quote Selected
Re: Timing and triplets Reply #2 – 1997-12-11 05:00 am It seems to me that you have got the number of notes in the measure slightly wrong. If the bar is in 6/8 time and there are only two sets of triplets in the first two measures you are short by 1 beat in the first two bars. Remember that a triplet is three notes played in the time of two. The first two bars would measure (no pun intended) up since there are the same number of triplets in both the treble and bass clefs. In the next measure however - in the bass clef has two triplets (two beats) while the treble clef has notes which add up to three beats. I suspect that, rather than triplets, you should only be using standard eith notes.Hope this helpsRichard Quote Selected