Any tool in Musescore to correct my ortography notation?

• Apr 23, 2020 - 19:23

Hello to all, I just finish my first score, and I have to show it in a kind of entry exam. I am very scary about my notation ortography because I am totally self taught.

Somebody knows If this software have any kind of correction tool?

Attachment Size
SERPIENTE.pdf 40.9 KB

Comments

Bravo! A real challenge for the clock keeper. When to break is a bit of a guessing game at that tempo. I assume Msc did the math

That was added from a MIDI file I would say. You need to correct the quantization. I would do it in the MIDI file and then import it.

In reply to by xavierjazz

Or the notation problems are because it looks like he was playing around with different note and rest values. Not unheard of to write for base clarinet in that clef. I suspect that if this is sort of an entry exam, they want to see where he is. I mean the notation technically isn't wrong in that MuseScore can play it.

Many thanks for all your replies, this foro works.

By the moment, I think I have find my first beginer mistake in use the bass cleff for the bass clarinete but I am not totally sure about.

Also I add the midi file for enrrich the information.

Attachment Size
SERPIENTE- copia.mid 453 bytes

In reply to by pablorajben

Bass clef for bass clarinet is a Thing. Mostly a 19th century German Thing, but bass clarinetists do come across it and deal with it. Note that it is still a transposing instrument still but only a second rather than a ninth as it would be in treble clef ... unless of course it is bass clarinet in A which is also a Thing, Richard Strauss liked doing that if I recall correctly.

There are and were legendary musicians who couldn't "read music", or write it, including, if Google is to be believed, Elvis Presley. Notation is a means for a composer/songwriter to convey his or her abstract idea of the rhythms and harmonies of their composition/song to others, so they can begin to interpret it. If you, as a composer, have no such idea because "I have no theory", then notation is not for you. You can teach your song to others by sound and video recordings and midi files, as do countless artists and teachers on YouTube and (before the pandemic) elsewhere. No program can, or should be asked to, figure out the abstract ideas behind your melody, if you yourself don't know them. By-sound-by-ear teaching and transmission of music is a venerable and living tradition. Notation is not what you need.

In reply to by pablorajben

Great, but those from-MIDI's aren't really "notation"; real music doesn't look like that. The very small notes and tied notes are not what is in your mind, but the results of midi-transcription. Until you look at other music vaguely in your style and get used to what it looks like, you'll not be in a position to judge whether automatic transcriptions of midi of your music looks like them, or to fix them so they do. Can you, in fact, read music for your instrument (i.e., to play it)?

In reply to by [DELETED] 1831606

Sorry I dont understand. I didnt use any automatic transcription method, either judge it because I didnt know nothing about this kind of method.

So my question could be If is possible to write this sequence of notes in order to it can be playble by respecting the parameters of the instrument, pitch and rhythm I indicated.

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