Dotted Ties 2008-03-22 07:15 pm In arranging some music for my church choir, I have run across a small problem with NWC. There is no way to insert a dotted (or broken) tie. This is sometimes necessary when the words of a verse are not sung at the same time as the preceding verse. Any ideas on how to place a dotted (or broken) tie would be appreciated. Quote Selected
Re: Dotted Ties Reply #1 – 2008-03-22 10:41 pm Perhaps something with Digital whiteout is what you need since NWC can't generate a dotted slur.The underscore character "_" can be used in the lyrics when a verse doesn't have a syllable on a specific note. Quote Selected
Re: Dotted Ties Reply #2 – 2008-03-22 11:49 pm Digital whiteout probably will work, but it may be finicky. I'd give that a try if you expect to print a whole bunch of copies, or if you want to preserve the song file for future printing.However, sometimes the easiest thing to do is just print the music, hand-draw the features the program doesn't provide. Quote Selected
Re: Dotted Ties Reply #3 – 2008-03-27 07:38 am What I do is, if there are too many notes, as Warren says, use the undersore to space the lyrics. If there are too many words, just put a dot ( or an undersore) between the words without any spaces to put multiple words on a note. The singers will pick up on the timing. Quote Selected
Re: Dotted Ties Reply #4 – 2008-03-31 01:40 pm Digital whiteout has worked quite well for me. I have a dings fonts consisting of various-sized rectangles, along with a few blank spaces that are narrower than the normal space. I insert a string of characters and spaces ("yûyûyûyûyûyû" for example) highlighted white, justified right. If the slur/tie is in the staff, the staff lines will also get "whiteouted." Layering is one way to compensate for it, but I also have staff lines included in the font and add those as well.Be nice if I didn't have to go through all that, though.[edit - typo] Quote Selected Last Edit: 2008-04-30 05:26 pm by K.A.T.
Re: Dotted Ties Reply #5 – 2008-04-01 12:28 pm MusiCruiser,For my choral scores where there should be a dotted slur I place text brackets around the slur. It's now our standard convention and the choristers soon learned what it means.Use <Justify Left>, <At next note or bar> and don't preserve width.It ain't elegant but it conveys the message.Cheers,Bill. Quote Selected
Re: Dotted Ties Reply #6 – 2008-04-30 05:27 pm Quote...text brackets around the slur.That's clever, and much easier than what I do. Quote Selected
Re: Dotted Ties Reply #7 – 2008-05-01 02:02 pm .Quote from: K.A.T. – 2008-04-30 05:27 pm...... much easier than what I do.Thanks K.A.T. It took my ancient brain a long time to wake up to the fact that bracketing is the standard procedure for notes that are not wanted in some verses, so why not slurs?Bill Quote Selected
Re: Dotted Ties Reply #8 – 2008-05-11 04:38 pm I have had to deal with this problem too. The problem with putting the brackets around the tie is that if you are also changing to a different note between bars you do not really want a tie/swipe between the two notes you just want to go from one note to the other without a break in the forward motion of the song. If the song is exported to a MIDI file it is played as a tie. My solution is to place a text note at the appropriate point. I use NoBr or NB to indicate that there is no breath to be taken. Quote Selected