User manual

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725
How the Score Editor works
About this chapter
In this chapter you will learn:
- How the Score Editor and MIDI data relate.
- What Display Quantize is and how it works.
Welcome!
Welcome to scoring in Cubase! The Score Editor has been created to allow you to
get any possible piece of music displayed as a score, complete with all the necessary
symbols and formatting. It allows you to extract parts out of a full orchestra score, to
add lyrics and comments, create lead sheets, score for drums, create tablature, etc. In
other words: just about any type of notation you could ever desire!
There are a few basic principles to how the Score Editor works, which you have to
understand to make full use of it.
How the Score Editor operates
The Score Editor does the following:
- Reads the MIDI notes in the MIDI parts.
- Looks at the settings you have made.
- Decides how the MIDI notes are displayed according to the settings.
The Score Editor takes MIDI data and settings as input and produces a score as output.
The Score Editor does all this in realtime. If you change some of the MIDI data (for
example by moving or shortening a note) this is immediately reflected in the score. If
you change some of the settings (for example the time signature or key signature) this
is also immediately apparent.
Do not think of the Score Editor as a drawing program, but rather as an “interpreter” of
MIDI data.
MIDI data
Score Editor Score display
Score settings