User manual

Table Of Contents
779
Polyphonic voicing
About this chapter
In this chapter you will learn:
- How to decide when to use polyphonic voicing.
- How to set up voices.
- How to automatically convert your score to polyphonic voicing.
- How to enter and move notes into voices.
Background: Polyphonic voicing
Polyphonic voicing allows you to resolve a number of situations impossible to score
properly otherwise:
Notes starting at the same position, but with different lengths. Without polyphonic
voicing you get unnecessary amounts of ties.
Without and with polyphonic voicing
Vocal scoring and similar. Without polyphonic voicing, all notes starting at the
same position are considered parts of a chord. With polyphonic voicing you can
give each voice a stem direction, you can have individual rest handling for each
voice, etc.
Without and with polyphonic voicing
Complicated piano systems. Without polyphonic voicing, you have to resort to a
fixed split note setting to decide which notes go on which clef. With polyphonic
voicing, the split point can be “floating”. The program can even automatically put a
bass line on the lower clef for you.
With a split system and with polyphonic voicing