Double Line System Separator
I've seen these two lines below some systems in scores - does anyone have more details on it?
(Credit: International Music Publications)
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Double Line System Separator.png | 158.65 KB |
I've seen these two lines below some systems in scores - does anyone have more details on it?
(Credit: International Music Publications)
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
Double Line System Separator.png | 158.65 KB |
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Comments
In my experience, these are used to group the various systems when there are a number of instruments being orchestrated. Makes it easy to scan.
Thanks!
Is there a formal name for them?
In reply to Thanks! Is there a formal by chen lung
I don't know of one. I wasn't taught this but learned it from reading scores. Perhaps someone with more education can answer?
In reply to I don't know of one. I wasn't by xavierjazz
In a large score, when there are often some different instruments that doesn't play , the lines are not the same number. And that "separation" allow the conductor's eyes to follow more easily the score.
(sometimes a "line" would need all the page because of numerous intruments play during that line, and sometimes there can be two or more "lines" because less instruments play).
I would be more understandable in french...........
In reply to Thanks! Is there a formal by chen lung
Lilypond documentation calls them "system separator mark"
Thanks lasconic!
#16273: System Separator Mark
In reply to Thanks lasconic! #16273: by chen lung
Yes, a very useful feature to have.
If you're using the "hide empty staves" function, and you have a reasonably complex score, systems will frequently be different heights. This makes it very touchy for a conductor to follow unless there are separators between the systems, which is why they've been around for so many years. Alas, it would be very time-consuming in a large Muse score to try to improvise them (using frames, for instance).
The point is, it's not a trivial issue, and would be a good function for the excellent MuseScore programmers to build into the application.
Cheers from Bangkok,
kentfx