Guitar strums

• Feb 13, 2020 - 04:00

Hey! I know that Musescore is designed for score writing and not for the synth aspects. But reality is that I am more and more interested in using the sounds that I hear from the synth when editing home recordings.

I don't know how this works but this is what I hear. The Classical Guitar is plucked, all notes simultaneously in chords. And both the Electric Guitar and Acoustic Guitar are strummed, like with a flatpick. I'd like to get both downstroke and upstroke strums, but I don't see how to do that. Also, the Classical Guitar, in practice, can be strummed with the thumb. Yet, I don't see that effect anywhere. I am wondering mainly about getting upstrokes, but it would also be interesting to be able to strum a violin or a tuba or other traditionally non-strummed instruments. In fact, it would be cool to bow a guitar or a trombone, just to hear what it sounds like.

Am I dreaming?


Comments

For down-up strums you can use arpeggios.
Have a listen: Strums.mscz
In this example the acoustic 'strums' are a little quicker than the classical.
This 'quickness' of the strum can be set in the Inspector using 'Stretch' .

Regarding traditionally non-strummed instruments...
Since soundfonts are sampled from real instruments you are welcome to find someone 'strumming' a tuba or 'bowing' a trombone and record samples for your soundfont. (Probably not gonna' happen... ;-)

See:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SoundFont
https://musescore.org/en/handbook/3/soundfonts-and-sfz-files#soundfonts

In reply to by Jm6stringer

That stretch is really nifty. I can get some really natural sounds with that. Those arrows only work with guitars? Where can I find the arrows? I think I managed to strum a trombone using fast arpeggios. It's meh. But the tuba that follows is quite nice. See attachment.

I found the arrows and they work with the tuba. They sound much better than the arpeggios.

Attachment Size
tuba_trombone_strums.mscz 26.71 KB

Do you still have an unanswered question? Please log in first to post your question.