rests appear in measures that are full of music

• Dec 14, 2016 - 18:02

I've written a 3-voice score for soprano, tenor and bass. In the tenor and bass, the rests that appear in a blank score still appear in every measure, even when filled with music. The rests that appear in a blank score even appear when my written music contains rests. I've tried un-selecting "show invisible" but the rests still appear in voices 2 and 3 when printed. Is there a way to print my composition without the initial blank score rests appearing underneath the notes?


Comments

In reply to by Shoichi

Thank you. I have tried selecting and deleting, I've tried selecting and 'v', both to no avail.

I did just find that selecting each rest individually, right-clicking and selecting "set invisible" works, but it's a lot of work. I don't understand why the full measure rests don't disappear when music is entered, like they do in voice 1.

My guess - you used voices 2 & 3 for tenor and bass. Don't do that. Always use voice 1 first for each staff, then 2. You have up to four voices *per staff*, and you always need to start from voice 1.

In reply to by Gillian Inksetter

To be clear: you can have as many staves as you want. A score for orchestra might easily have 30 or more. Each of those staves can have up to four voices. Most staves won't need for than one voice, so it will be voice 1 for each staff. But if you elect to combine two parts onto a single staff - as you are doing with tenor and bass, or an orchestra might do with the two flute parts - then you would use voices 1 & 2. Multiple voices are also used in music for piano, guitar, and other instruments that can play more than one note at a time, to allow multiple independent rhythms going on at once.

As for full measure rests going away, they *do* go away when the measure is filled with music - if you fill voice 1. If you only fill voice 2, 3, or 4, then the rest is still shown in voice 1 to indicate that whatever is going on in that voice is indeed resting. So if you have a measure where bass (voice 2) sings but tenor (voice 1) does not, the rest for the tenor is present, exactly as you would normally expect.

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