Manual Spacing offset between quavers

• Sep 28, 2024 - 13:23

Hi, i found old documentation of how to achieve this offset between quavers in older versions of musescore, but none for M4. Since the Inspector has since been overhauled, i am clueless. In the properties Tab you can manually offset the heads and stems, but the beam does not have said feature. Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Attachment Size
unison test.png 9.68 KB

Comments

musescore help.JPG here is a visual representation of my problem:

i have the above and want it to look like my handdrawn verson below (basically just move the orange voice a nod to the right)

Attachment Size
musescore help.JPG 30.19 KB

In reply to by profsmog

A Bach Fugue? If so, which one? Or another composer? Please be more specific, by providing a pdf or an image of a few measures (including the one you've drawn), we might be able to advise you better. Also, I'm not sure that placing the bass line in Voice 2 is appropriate here.

In reply to by profsmog

Ah. Then you know that what keyboard instrument you are writing for makes a difference in how you write something. Do you really like the jumble that results from just moving the red notes over? Yes you want the red notes to be held longer. I'm assuming this is for organ. Would you write the same thing for piano or harpsichord? Or accordion? Then you also know that there is a difference between music that is written technically correct and that which is musical.
This is why you were asked so many questions by someone with way more experience than you :)

In reply to by bobjp

you are very wrong on multiple accounts. clearly you dont know what you are talking about.

  1. i did not ask for anyones opinion, i needed help with the program and got a kind and helpful answer already.

  2. neither instrument, nor piece, nor epoch nor anything really is relevant for my technical question

  3. but since you want to push the aspects of musicality and correctness let me educate you:
    the offsetting of notes has absolutely nothing to do with lenght of said notes. also it is very appropriate in this context (fugue in baroque style). this is simply a measure taken for readability (and also for contrapunctal reasons)
    let me give you multiple examples of standard wll-tempered-clavier I editions where the same is done: wtc.JPG wtc2.JPG wtc3.JPG

Attachment Size
wtc.JPG 17.72 KB
wtc2.JPG 15.18 KB
wtc3.JPG 14.55 KB

In reply to by profsmog

Thank you for taking the time to educate me. Though clearly you have no idea how to interact online.

  1. Great I'm glad you got the answer you needed. The person that first asked you questions was not me. But a teacher with more years experience with notation software than you. He was only trying to be helpful. Yet you chose to be rude.

  2. True. But only partially.

  3. None of these examples is even close to what you wanted in your drawing. When I moved your red notes over, I came up with the first measure in my image. Kind of a jumble. If the length of the red notes doesn't matter, then you could write it like my second measure. Not Baroque notation style. But I doubt they would have written what you did.
    offset.png

Do you still have an unanswered question? Please log in first to post your question.