Fermatas are miscategorised
Reported version
3.0
Priority
P2 - Medium
Type
Functional
Severity
S5 - Suggestion
Status
active
Regression
No
Workaround
No
Project
Fermatas are currently placed in the 'Articulations' palette. While a fermata could be considered an articulation (since it alters the length of the note), I think it's more suited to the 'Breaths & Pauses' palette (specifically because it's a 'Pause'). I think this should apply to all 7 fermatas in the palette.
Does anyone support this idea? If people do, I'll make the changes and submit a PR.
Comments
It's like a suggestion :)
It is a pause only if applied to a barline though (but see also #270990: Unable to add fermatas to bar lines). So I'm not a fan of this change
Unless maybe add them there rather than move them there
You know, I was just thinking this same thing earlier today! True, it's not a true pause, but then, it's even more true that it is not an articulation. Because neither is a perfect fit, and because people are accustomed to it, I'd support having it in both places.
However, before we go mess with that, might be good to merge https://github.com/musescore/MuseScore/pull/4341 so we can edit the XML files directly. And I'd also like to address the "Staff Type Change" and other layout-related element as per #278205: Move Staff Type Change to another palette (it is not text).
Ursus in mente, fermatas are frequently used to indicate the ends of chorale-lines, even in organ chorale preludes, when no execution/slowdown at all is wanted. And many of us use hidden, playing fermatas as expressive control of tempo (and I wish those distinctions were possible in MusicXML, but they're not).
FWIW, I was just looking up fermatas in Gould, it says "see pause mark", and sure enough, they are covered in the same section :-)
Would love to see barline fermata pause properties work for inter-movement pauses (now that the fermata-on-barlines issue is fixed).
For Inter-movement pauses use section breaks, they have a 3 seconds pause by default already and should be used to separate movements anyway, so measure numbering starts from 1 and again, and courtesy key and time signture are not shown at the end of the previous section
In reply to For Inter-movement pauses … by Jojo-Schmitz
Section breaks are too big a hammer in this case (for instance, I don't want need or want measure numbers to restart). The source music I'm working with at the moment (Corelli's La Folia) uses barline fermata to indicate a pause. I can use a hidden "comma fermata" pause to get what I need, so I'm okay. Maybe this is less common than I thought, but it appears to have come up multiple times in the forum.
In reply to Section breaks are too big a… by mcx
FWIW, Gould describes the use of fermata ("pause"), break (,), and caesura (//) above barlines (including combining a fermata with one of the other two to indicate break duration).
Fermata marks most commonly require a player to hold on a note for a period of time. You could call it an articulation but I think it's most appropriately categorised as a hold or pause. Check out Behind Bars on this (attached imagery).
Also, Dorico have very deliberately categorised fermata marks under 'Holds and Pauses'. I think that categorisation is far more likely to be correct than not. (Finale puts all kinds of things under the catch-all of 'articulation', including tremolo and mordents. Sibelius also classifies them this way but it feels like they did it for utility reasons due to lack of space).
On another now, I'd prefer to avoid putting the same element in two different places because it will make general reorganisation harder later.
In reply to Fermata marks most commonly… by Tantacrul
Oh, I already said what I wanted on this thread on Dec 17 2018. Oops.
The only reason they are lumped in with articulations is that this is how they were originally implemented - a particular type of articulation, which encompassed any marking applied to a chord as opposed to a note or a segment. Now fermata are their own element type, and I agree that conceptually they share more in common with pauses.
Btw, we also need to consider the Selection Filter.