Beam Cross through 3 staves

• Sep 7, 2022 - 01:02

I need help with getting a beam across all 3 staves, like in the picture below

Attachment Size
imagem_2022-09-07_010205003.png 45.77 KB

Comments

There is a workaround:
1. Create dummy notes on the top stave, make them invisible and silent.
2. Add the cross-staff notes you need straight on the lowest stave, with a beam - make beam invisible.
3. For the "cross-staff" notes on the lowest stave, turn off Automatic Placement for their stems.
4. Extend the stems right up to the top stave.
Cross-staff workaround for three staves.png

Attachment Size
Cross-staff across three staves.mscz 9.08 KB

In reply to by Tropax

I know you are only interested in reproducing what you see. That's fine.
I'm just asking myself, from a notation standpoint, what is the advantage of putting the last two 8th notes in the bottom bass clef? Rather than the one above it.

In reply to by Tropax

Sorry. I know my comments are off topic and probably out of line. But still, I see other of his pieces use odd notation. Like a piece where a low bass note is tied across 13 measures. I did notice one urtext version of a section with three staves where the editor reproduced the original plus their suggestion of the same 8 measures on two staves. This made much more sense.

In reply to by bobjp

Was it the same section I asked, or a different piece?
Yes but he uses odd notation, and uses diagonal lines to indicate voice changes, something I have never seen before.
He also uses other odd things as well, for instance, I transcribed his ballade for piano and cello, and there was a part where the left hand had 6/4 tempo and the right hand had 4/4

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