Choosing the instrument range
I know that I once saw a dialog box where you could choose the note range of an instrument. You also could select expert range, so that very low or very high notes would not have gray noteheads.
I cannot find that info in the MuseScore menus or documentation. Kindly point me to the right place.
Thank you.
Comments
To view or not view outside usable pitch notes: https://musescore.org/en/handbook/preferences#note-input
See: https://musescore.org/en/handbook/staff-properties
Right-click on a staff and select Staff Properties.... to adjust the usable pitch
HTH
In reply to To view or not view outside… by Shoichi
Thank you, Shoichi.
I do read the manual, but often don't get the hit that I need in the search results.
In reply to To view or not view outside… by Shoichi
Yes, thank you. I couldn't find that in the handbook, either. Searching for coloration of out of range notes simply leads to Edit/Preferences/Note Input/Color notes outside of usable pitch range, which of course does not allow any adjustment of that range.
Also, it would be ideal if there were a definition of what the octave ranges mean. For example, for a 4-string electric bass I infer that E1 means an E in the lowest octave the instrument can play (in fact the lowest note the instrument can play in standard tuning), and that E2 therefore means the next highest E and that on this instrument this is the start of the second octave, etc. However, in the score I was reading every note above what should be F3 (i.e., F#3 and above) was colored red despite the fact that F4 was set as the high end of the range. Perhaps this is because the bass is a (one octave) transposing instrument? If that's the reason, it strikes me as a bug.
In reply to Yes, thank you. I couldn't… by RBass
Change the range in staff properties (Quite obvious tome, where else to expect this?)
And yes, bass is a transposing instrument, shows in bass clef but actually play in bass clef ottava bassa
In order to get tablature working, this quirk is needed, to not really a bug.
In reply to Yes, thank you. I couldn't… by RBass
As far as the octaves defined for notes, C4 is middle C in MuseScore. This means that C1 is 3 octaves below middle C and F5 is an octave and a fourth above middle C and so forth. When an instrument is transposed an octave, you need to keep this in mind. So the C near the middle of the Bass clef for the Electric Bass is C2, not C3 as in non transposing instruments.
HTH
The Alto Sax sound in Musesounds needs to have its range extended further (all 4 saxophone sounds, Soprano, Alto, Tenor, & Baritone) because they make Low A Alto Saxophones & the advantages of that is that the Low A Key allows for a larger note range (the sounding pitch is C3 like the Viola's C String), & it helps improve the intonation.