That is checked. What I needed to check was Ignore Layers Containing Only
Hidden Notes.
But, the ties are still flipped in the wrong direction.
On Wed, Nov 16, 2011 at 4:54 PM, Christopher Smith
christopher.sm...@videotron.ca wrote:
Make sure Layer 2 is set to only switch stem directions when
Hi, Ryan,
Are the layer settings interfering with the directions of the stems?
By the way, I have problems with the layer dialogue box trying to show and hide
layers and set stem directions properly and adjacent chord notes and
accidentals under different circumstances and would like to have a
Make sure Layer 2 is set to only switch stem directions when there are items in
other layers. This should show up correctly in the part. If it doesn't, maybe
stems were flipped manually (L) or there is file corruption.
Christopher
On Wed Nov 16, at WednesdayNov 16 7:09 PM, Ryan wrote:
If you're not otherwise bound by some editorial edict you could use tied
quarter notes across the three beats.
Sent from my iPhone
On Jan 27, 2010, at 4:44 AM, dc den...@free.fr wrote:
Say you have three voices on one staff, as in the first bars (left hand), of
the Goldbergs (see link to
If you must have three distinct voices, using Goldberg as an example, Im not
aware of a rule governing the stem of the third note. My point was that you
coould have a G on beat one, a G-B on beat 2, and a G-B-D on beat 3, with Gs
and Bs tied. If a pianist played the Goldberg acc to the example
There is no rule as far as I know, but I would have thought
legibility would be improved by having the stems in the middle voice
down, so as not to have to avoid a collision with the rest on beat 2.
In the last measure though, the stem should be up, otherwise there
would be a collision
I frequently run into this situation in guitar music. I have never found a
rule for the stem direction of the middle stems and so always point the
stems to best minimize confusion caused by wrongly reading the notes of two
voices with stems in the same direction as one voice (and not adding up
dc wrote:
Say you have three voices on one staff, as in the first bars (left
hand), of the Goldbergs (see link to scan below). Assuming the upper
voice has all its stems upwards, the lower voice all stems downwards,
what is the rule for the middle part?
What you coud do, is notate the three
Dennis writes:
Say you have three voices on one staff, as in the first bars (left
hand), of the Goldbergs (see link to scan below). Assuming the upper
voice has all its stems upwards, the lower voice all stems
downwards, what is the rule for the middle part?
Speedy, L
-Original Message-
From: finale-boun...@shsu.edu [mailto:finale-boun...@shsu.edu]
On Behalf Of Lawrence David Eden
Sent: Friday, January 02, 2009 7:24 AM
To: FinaleList
Subject: [Finale] stem direction
Currently suffering from a brain freeze:
How do I change the stem
In Finale 2006 it's:
tools-advanced tools - special tools - stem direction.
But I'm sure there's a much simpler, quicker way but i can' remember it
either.
Cheers
lawrenceyates.co.uk
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In a message dated 02/01/2009 15:38:40 GMT Standard Time,
rich...@yatesguitar.com writes:
Speedy, L
That's the one!!!
lawrenceyates.co.uk
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On 2.1.2009, at 15:24, Lawrence David Eden wrote:
Currently suffering from a brain freeze:
How do I change the stem direction on a single note?
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Speedy Entry /
Raimund Lintzen wrote:
What is the rule for stem direction
when a single (8th) grace note (flag not crossed)
preceed a note:
Is there a fixed rile for stem direction?
Thank you for helping!
I don't think there's any hard-and-fast rule. I seem to recall seeing
grace note stems mostly
: dhbaileymailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: finale@shsu.edumailto:finale@shsu.edu
Sent: Monday, December 03, 2007 12:04 PM
Subject: Re: [Finale] stem direction for grace notes?
Raimund Lintzen wrote:
What is the rule for stem direction
when a single (8th) grace note (flag
At 5:55 PM +0100 12/3/07, Raimund Lintzen wrote:
What is the rule for stem direction
when a single (8th) grace note (flag not crossed)
If the flag is not crossed it would be an appoggiatura rather than a
grace note. And I would put the stem up by instinct, although I
don't know any rule
In 2008, DOCUMENT OPTIONSLAYERS is where you need to look. Set the options as
you want them.
Jim
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thu 12-Jul-07 15:52
To: finale@shsu.edu
Subject: [Finale] Stem direction?
I also can't find anything about changing
stem direction. I have a vocal part that
I also can't find anything about changing
stem direction. I have a vocal part that
splits the soprano and the chords must show
stems as up and down, but I can't find
anything that refers to stem direction settings.
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On Sep 7, 2004, at 11:41 PM, Raymond Horton wrote:
To reopen an old can of worms, orchestral string sections divide
nearly everything, even passages marked as double stops, to get
maximum sound and best intonation. So, generally, don't sweat the
notation to differentiate. The players don't.
I add my voice to this discussion.
Dividing double stops is usually not done to improve intonation. It is an
axiom that the string player never really plays in tune until mastering
double-stops. When the player sounds both pitches they not only hear the
correct temperament, they feel it.
This work contains many other instances of double-stops that need to be
played by each player for the above mentioned reason of resonance.
This observation is spot-on. It is a simple fact that the timbre of
double stops is completely different to single stops on multiple
instruments.
Owain:
a pet peeve of mine is string players' belief that they can
overrule a composer's explicit indications at will. Quite how
somebody interprets sul G as sul G until you don't like it very
much, or until you get above 4th position, and then do whatever you
want is beyond me.
Not just
D. Keneth Fowler wrote:
To the wisdom of the list,
FinWin 2004b. Full score for anthem with instrumental accompaniment.
Question regards handling stems in the wind parts: Flutes 1 and 2,
Clarinets 1 and 2, Horns 1 and 2. In each case 1 and 2 share the same
staff. At the moment I have set two
On Tue, 07 Sep 2004 13:59:42 -0400, D. Keneth Fowler wrote:
Using one stem where rhythms are identical is less busy and seems to offer
added open space between staves. For each pair the rhythm is the same,
except for several short rhythmically independent moments. Does common
practice call
Oh, and as a side note: Vocal staves should never share stems (Stone,
Music Notation in the Twentieth Century, p. 165).
I wish this was also common practice for divisi string parts, to clearly
distinguish them from double stops. Alas, it isn't the case, and things
get played wrongly as a
At 12:29 PM 9/7/04 -0700, Brad Beyenhof wrote:
There seems to be a clear way of notating any possible outcome;
perhaps this method is not held to very widely among composers? Or if
it is, is it possible that string players themselves are not
well-versed with the convention?
If my recent piece is
To reopen an old can of worms, orchestral string sections divide nearly
everything, even passages marked as double stops, to get maximum sound
and best intonation. So, generally, don't sweat the notation to
differentiate. The players don't.
Even chamber groups will do this. I once observed
On Sep 7, 2004, at 11:39 AM, Brad Beyenhof wrote:
Oh, and as a side note: Vocal staves should never share stems (Stone,
Music Notation in the Twentieth Century, p. 165).
Don't know what Stone means by vocal staves, but if you're writing
SATB on two staves in hymnbook style, sharing stems is
Raymond Horton wrote:
To reopen an old can of worms, orchestral string sections divide nearly
everything, even passages marked as double stops, to get maximum sound
and best intonation. So, generally, don't sweat the notation to
differentiate. The players don't.
I've never ever come across
On 5/19/04 3:57 PM, David McKay wrote:
Can anyone tell me how to make an extracted part's stem direction revert to
normal convention, please?
Mass Edit tool, Select All, then Mass Edit Utilities Remove Stem Changes
--
Brad Beyenhof
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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