Extending a note into a tuplet

• Nov 6, 2019 - 22:11

Hi all, I just started learning musescore and i'm trying to get used to it by transcribing the sheet music for rachamaninoff's moment musicaux op 16 no 4. I have a question about how dot notation works.

95% of the left hand in this piece is 16th sextuplets. the original sheet music is doing this weird thing:
theirs.png

which, for the right hand, I don't think is actually valid. what I have to do in order to match the timing of that measure is this:
ours.png

basically it looks like the original author used the dot notation to extend notes into tuplets, even though the rest of the measure is just 4/4...is it possible to express this in musescore? or is what I'm doing the right way to do it?


Comments

You have only two dots on your minim. Serge has 3. That would make it minim+crotchet+quaver+semi quaver, leaving one semiquaver needed to complete the 4th beat. Or in US term half+quarter+eighth+16th = 3 3/4 beats leaving 1/4 beat to be filled by the eighth note.

In reply to by SteveBlower

right that's what i'm asking about, three dots gives me 1/4 beat but what i actually need at the end of the measure is 1/6 beat. right now I use two dots to get 1/2 beat at the end, then split that into a triplet and put the last 16th at the end so it counts as 1/6

In reply to by pikajude

Unless the tempo is v-e-r-y slow I would think that a player would not be able to make a distinction between a regular semiquaver and a sextuplet one in this case and even if they did, the listener would not notice. My guess is that Mr R used a slightly inaccurate notation for the sake of simplicity. In order to notate it as a sextuplet he would have had to do something like you have tried.

A triple dotted 1/2 note would leave a 16th note left over in a 4/4 measure. The triple dot can be found in the advanced palette, basic stops at 2 dots.

In reply to by pikajude

The difference between the locations are so close it would be very likely that an engraver would line up the notes. These were engraved by hand back then rather than having the benefit of a computer to place the notes precisely where they belong in time like happens in notation programs such as MuseScore.

I suspect most musicians would make the fudge in playing it and play the notes at the same time. This is likely the intention of the composer, but what you are requesting is impossible to notate correctly. There is no tuplet that will allow you to put dots on a 1/2 or 1/4 note and line up with the last note of a 6th-let.

In reply to by pikajude

One viable solution is to make a triplet of 32nd notes and then hide the tuple number and first rest. Playback won't be an issue because of the pedaling, and it would be normal to play so anyways. The benefit here is that the last sixteenth-note will align - as with the old-timers' engraving - with the lower staff's last note.

E.g.:
rachnotes.png

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