playback pizz. for entire score

• Jun 16, 2020 - 17:55

i found what i think allows me to make all the notes on a staff sound in pizzicato on the playback -"Mid-staff sound change (pizz., con sordino, etc.)"; is there a way to make all the notes in the whole score for that voice to sound pizz. in playback?


Comments

In reply to by Philip Ellis Foster

As it is an instrument playing technique you indeed need to apply it per instrument.

If the instrument only plays pizzicato, you may prefer just selecting the pizzicato playback sound for it in the mixer (but that still is done for each instrument separately, so just copy pasting the text is probably much faster)

Using the Mixer for this is a mistake. Human musicians don't see mixers; they only see the score. Simply add the "pizz" marking to the first measure of each staff you want to play pizzicatto. Then both MuseScore and human musicians will play it correctly.

In reply to by Philip Ellis Foster

now i have a real problem. this piece is for mezzo-soprano and violin. i changed the name in the box at the top from mezzo-soprano to violin. then found violins pizzicato below and then closed it. when i played it back the mezzo was pizzicato and the violin was bowed!!!

how do i undo it for the mezzo? and how do i get it to work for the violin.

In reply to by jeetee

thanks again. appreciate your help. am under time pressure.

i thought of what you said but could not figure out what to choose for normal voice. is that what is meant by Solo Vox? what should i use? is there no other simple way to undo or reset to normal?

second, what is meant by choose the correct track for the violin? there is a box at the top labelled "Name:". when i opened the mixer it said mezzo soprano there. i changed the word there to "violin" but evidently that had no effect as the pizz sound went to the mezzo staves.

In reply to by jeetee

i have looked through that section three times. i do not see anything which says how to undo what i did with the mixer. it may be there but if so its in language i do not understand. There is also no explanation of what to do with the name box other than what i did and it didn't change from mezzo to violin when i closed it.

In reply to by Philip Ellis Foster

It mentions how to change the sound for an instrument. So if you want the voice to change its sound, do so. Don't think of "undo"; think "I want to change the playback sound of this instrument without changing the instrument itself"

I think the screenshot of the mixer might be outdated or using a different translation than what I have currently, but even then... Where my mixer shows the "Sound" dropdown (to select a sound) the screenshot shows "patch".
And the description for patch is given as: "This is the actual Sound from the soundfont that is used to render your instrument."
> So we discover that the playback sound of an instrument can be changed by that dropdown in the details section (huzzah! exactly what we were looking for)

Now the first description of that details area states:
"The details area displays and provides finer control of the currently selected track."
Which hints back at the... track area, which was explained in the manual just above it; an area showing columns for each track/instrument in the score.
> So how to select a track? By clicking on it in the track area. (perhaps this is the information you are missing/find unclear in the handbook?)

With this information you can now always change the playback sound of any track/instrument in your score

Moving on to the "Name" field in that view; let me start by quoting the manual again:
"The name of the part this track is associated with. Both part tracks and channel tracks display the part name. Note: The part name is editable, but this only have effect for the Mixer. The channel name is not editable.

See that "Note" there? It explicitly states that this field has only effect on the mixer itself (so on nothing else). Why'd you then think it would?

In reply to by jeetee

thank you so very much. i will give this a try. what i don't understand is where you saw all this information about the mixer. i don't recall see it but i will look in the handbook again.

i did not know what patch meant when i saw the dropdown list, but evidently this will solve that problem.

i am sorry to take so much of your time, but most grateful for it.

In reply to by Philip Ellis Foster

i did find the text which you have. i looked at it before but did not find a discussion on how to reset the sound. it says that Name is editable and i believe as i said i did that i erased the word mezzo and typed in violin but it did not go to the violin part and i guess that is because i also had to change the channel from mezzo to violin which i did not realize.

anyhow i am still stuck because i can't find the PATCH option. can someone help with this please?

In reply to by jeetee

i think i misunderstood. I thought you meant i could find Patch as an option on the dropdown menu whereas all you were saying was that i could use that to return to the initial playback sound, which i completely understood.

The problem is i don't know what option to chose to get back to the original sound for mezzo-soprano.Can you or someone else tell me which of the options on the drop-down menu i should select?

In reply to by Philip Ellis Foster

It means that that is the intention of the sound yes. A single voice (literally solo vox).

The "Expr." part of those instrument names has nothing to do with how the sound is produced/sung, but everything with being able to perform single note dynamics or not (a cresc during a long note).
Many of our stock instruments come in both options, with and without the "expr".

And indeed the "Choir Aah" sound is intended to sound a bit like that. But those names are still just names given by the soundfont creator. And if the soundfont is general midi compatible (which ours is) then those names are defined by that standard.

To know which of the 6-ish vocal-like sounds (provided by default) you want to use, you'll have to listen to them in the context of your score. Depending on the genre of music, one might prefer one sound over the other.

In reply to by Philip Ellis Foster

MuseSvore follows the General MIDI standard for soundfonts, it’s what virtually all synthesizers etc use. There is no need for separate sounds for mezzo soprano vs alto or whatever, the sound simply samples whatever voice is needed to produce that note. At most there could be separate sounds for male and female voices, but General MIDI doesn’t define that, so standard soundfonts don’t include that. Most likely you can find a soundfont somewhere online that does if it’s important to you.

In reply to by jeetee

trying now t change mixer from the mezzo voice to the violin voice to get the violin voice to be all in pizz. From what i understand about name being editable, is what i should do then is remove the word mezzo and type the word violin in the name box ? I think this is what i did before but the sound font did not change for the violin. is there something else i have to do to change the sound from the mezzo voice to the violin voice?

In reply to by Philip Ellis Foster

Almost certainly there is a simple answer. But until you attach your score, there is no way for us to know for sure what you did wrong or how to advise you on how to fix it. That goes for almost every problem you might have. If you attach your score when you first ask, you will usually get the correct answer within minutes rather than require hours or days of back and forth involving people guessing at how to help.

In reply to by Philip Ellis Foster

Hi Philip - those violin chords again. If the violin is tuned normally you can't play what you've written as the Db can only be played on the G (bottom) string. I assume you are using scordatura, with the strings tuned G - Db - F - Eb. You will then need to indicate the scordatura tunings at the start, and change the notes on the page to reflect the fingering. I don't know how you can do this easily in Musescore - maybe your violinist is happy to do the transpositions on the fly.

Here is an example of the usual way of writing scordatura:

Attachment Size
scordatura-ex.jpg 108.93 KB

In reply to by Philip Ellis Foster

So, since you want the violin part to play pizzicato, simply add the "pizz" marking from the palette to the first note.

For the voice part, it isn't clear what you actually want instead of pizzicato violin. Do you want it to sound like an actual voice? Or maybe like a bowed violin? The instrument is already set correctly as you can see if you right-click the staff and choose Staff/Part Properties. So all you need to do is go to View / Mixer, select that staff (the first one, on the left) and change the sound to whatever you want.

In reply to by Philip Ellis Foster

one suggestion for next revision, aside from adding fonts for different voice ranges, maybe better to list the options in alphabetical order

While this might seem handy at first, it quickly turns out that in the current order (defined by General MIDI) it is very easy to switch to a sound from the same family. All guitar sounds are grouped for example.
If the list were made alphabetically, looking through all sounds related to one instrument would become way harder.

A trick you might not know yet is that once you've opened the list you can press the first letter of the sound you're looking for on your keyboard and the list will jump to the next entry starting with that letter.

In reply to by Philip Ellis Foster

Then you'll probably like the redesign proposal for MS4 better (see https://musescore.org/en/node/305002 for that proposal)

The current design is borrowed more from the DAW and real mixer world. On real consoles it is extremely common to have the details view on top and the track area on the bottom. But I can see how that would be less intuïtive for "normal" composers.
Then again, by the time you last posted that you changed the name in that label, it had already been pointed out twice that this was not an action you should be taken.

This has all become a very lengthy thread just because you for some reason refused to simply use the pizzicato text element; which would've never required you to even go into the mixer, as all of that is set up by default..

In reply to by Philip Ellis Foster

You would need to add to each violin staff if you had more than one, but you don’t - there is only one violin staff here. Sure, it continues across several systems but it’s still only one staff. There would only be multiple violin staves if you had multiple
violins (eg separate first and second parts like in a string quarter or orchestra). And if you did have multiple violin staves, youd need to change them all one at a time in the Mixer, which is much slower than adding Pizz to all of them at once.

In reply to by Philip Ellis Foster

No, no, no

As pointed out before, changing the name field does nothing but change what name you get to see for that instrument in the mixer.

Go to the bottom area (the one called the track area in the handbook), and click on the column of your violin instrument; you'll see the details part update with that information and see the track color change to show it is now selected.

In reply to by Philip Ellis Foster

A human is the answer.

All of these sounds are merely possible approximations. In once score the "aah" sound will be a better(*) match, in another score the "ooh"; in yet another score the "flute" might be better, or the "alto sax" or the "solo vox" or the "whatever"

(*) better is of course a subjective thing.
Pick one
Playback
Don't like it? Pick another one.
Do like it? Done :)

In reply to by Philip Ellis Foster

I tend to prefer the sound of woodwind instruments for voice part playback, personally (eg, clarinet or oboe). It's totally up to you. But FWIW, to get to the original default, you could right-click the staff, Staff/Part Properties, Change Instrument, and just select the same instrument again. This will reset the settings for that staff.

The Solo Vox sound is part of the General MIDI standard, I'm guessing it comes from a synthesized imitation voice sound included in some of the early MIDI synthesizers. So it's useful if you're trying to recreate some sounds of 80's pop music, etc.

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