An old cd,
a song that I liked a lot and that MuseScore allows me to write (but with hyphenation Google translator can not help me):
Rosmarino.mscz Rosmarino
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
Rosmarino.mscz | 7.42 KB |
a song that I liked a lot and that MuseScore allows me to write (but with hyphenation Google translator can not help me):
Rosmarino.mscz Rosmarino
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
Rosmarino.mscz | 7.42 KB |
Do you still have an unanswered question? Please log in first to post your question.
Comments
Should the tenor be down one octave?
In reply to Should the tenor be down one by underquark
by convention tenor parts are written in violin clef but sung one octave down. It's also the case for guitar, an for string bass (in bass key)
In modern edition one often clarify using the 8va bassa violin key that is available in the palette.
Im Renaissance century one used the Ut4th clef
In reply to Should the tenor be down one by underquark
I have asked myself, I am not clear, but I only search for the score and tried to reproduce it faithfully. Somewhere I must have mistaken...
http://imslp.org/wiki/7_Lieder,_Op.62_%28Brahms,_Johannes%29
In reply to Matter of ignorance. by Shoichi
For tenor you'd either use the clef Robert mentions, or make it a transposing instrument, one octave down, to male it sound right.
In reply to For tenor you'd either use by Jojo-Schmitz
I had done it, but in the original it is not indicated low-8va and ... I'm just a copyist and I flatter myself that some chorister wants to sing together
In reply to Yes, thank you all. by Shoichi
It matters less for notation than for playback, it just doesn't sound right an octave to high