Contribution Ocarina Signatures (12-Hole)

• Dec 28, 2014 - 21:47

It is helpful for beginners who play ocarina to have a finger signatur. The signatures can appear under the notes. I have already created the symbols as vektor graphic and would like to contribute to MuseScore.

The file attachment didn't work so you can download from:
https://openclipart.org/people/solarstar/12-Hole_Ocarina_Finger_Chart.s…


Comments

It would be nice to have an easy way of writing tabs and finger charts. This would be a good plug-in.

That being said, there are a lot of different kinds of ocarinas. (I have a nine-hole that I made myself, this weekend actually, then there's four-holes, six-holes, eight-holes, etc. Plus alternate turnings like minor scale ocarinas) And using tabs is a bad habit (if you only use tabs, you'll never learn to read music. And tabs don't say anything about rhythm. I am almost dependent on guitar tabs because I started the bad habit of only using tabs. Learning to read music with guitar has been challenging because I know I can just tab it out. Anyways it's hard to find ocarina tabs, especially with so many different kinds of ocarinas out there! But sheet music is easy to find.) so I don't think the developers are going to add it :/. It would make a great plug-in, though.

I've been learning to play my new Ocarina, and what I do is think in solfege (Do-re-mi-fa-so-la-ti-do, I'm a singer)- if the key signature is F, then F is Do. "Do" on my Ocarina is when 8 holes are fully covered, "re" is seven covered, etc., so I can play any scale by knowing what scale degrees are what (Bb in F major is Fa, which means cover five holes) and just playing them in my Ocarina's key instead of the written key. If you plan on playing with other instruments, your best bet is to get REALLY good at fingering and memorizing note-names, or just get Ocarinas in several different keys. It helps to know basic music theory (key signatures, major and minor chords, reading sheet music, etc.) and there are plenty of websites out there that can help with that. I use Musictheory.net.

Oh and here's a secret- the fingering charts are just a suggestion. It doesn't actually matter where the holes are, it only matters how big they are (I know because I made one. And I read about it a lot, too. The physics of the sound rely on surface area- the size of the hole). So if it's easier for you to half cover a certain hole instead of fully uncovering a hole, or something like that, do it. If you come to a point in a song where you know you have to sharp or flat a note, just partially cover or uncover a hole instead of searching for the "correct" fingering. As long as you have good ear for pitch and breathe correctly you'll stay in tune no matter what those tabs say.

That's generous of you to make tab images and donate them like that. I hope you can find a good solution. And I hope my advice is helpful and not discouraging. Playing instruments is fun, especially when you can take them with you. And it's hard work! But it's worth it.

In reply to by joseph.branden…

Just as the ukulele was "In" last year, I think the ocarina may be the "New Black" for this year. My teenage son got some Amazon vouchers for doing an acting part in a social work teaching/documentary series, bought an ocarina (a la Zelda) and now we have ordered a multi-pack of the things so that he can do an ocarina workshop at Summer camp.

I had (actually, I technically still have it though suspect that youngest daughter has squirrelled it away somewhere) an F tin whistle but always thought of the note names in relation to the instrument that I was companying. The reason I bought an F was that I also played a Bb cornet, it fitted in OK with concert-pitch instruments (guitar, violin etc.) and it was cheaper than a C whistle (this last part mattered a lot at the time as it was in the Thatcher era and just before the Miners' strike).

I agree that an appreciation of pitch is utmost. Folk musicians adapt on the fly, orchestral tuba players are expected to cope (and they do, admirably) and many old scores don't have a key signature but just let the horn players work it out for themselves.

In reply to by underquark

I've written a plugin to indicate fingerings above the staves: for a 12-hole C3 ocarina. It is based on the 'Note Names' plugin.
It works on my computer running Ubuntu and MuseScore3.2.3.
Just unzip the Ocarina_C3 font and install it on your computer.
You may need to change the value '48' in the plugin (line 38) to a multiple of 12 (12, 24, 36, 48...).

var Pitch = notes[i].pitch - 48

After running the plugin:
- change the staff font to Ocarina_C3 and choose the font size (Format/Style/Text Style/Staff)
- you may have to modify the staves width so that the fingerings are not stacked.

Attachment Size
Ocarina.qml 5.98 KB
Ocarina_C3.7z 2.5 KB

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