User manual

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Slurs
Slurs are tapered, curved lines that join notes to indicate legato articulation and phrasing.
Depending on the context and the instrument to which they apply, slurs can have additional
meanings to simply marking phrases. For example, for wind players, a slur indicates that all the
notes in the phrase are played in the same breath and without re-tonguing or re-articulating any
notes. For string players, a slur indicates that all the notes in the phrase are played legato and
under one bow. For singers, slurs indicate that more than one note is sung to the same syllable.
Slurs can be placed both above and below the staff, depending on the stem directions of the
notes to which they apply. In order to keep slur endpoints close to notes, slurs are placed outside
articulations on notes in the middle of slurs, but between notes and larger articulations on the
rst/last notes of slurs. For example, accents and stress marks are placed outside the ends of
slurs but staccato and tenuto marks are placed inside the ends of slurs by default.
Slurs both above and below the staff, including a cross-staff slur
NOTE
Slurs must not be confused with ties, which look supercially similar, but instead join notes of the
same pitch to indicate that they are played as a single note. In that sense, ties are part of
rhythmic notation, while slurs are considered articulation.
RELATED LINKS
Inputting slurs on page 203
Ties on page 831
General placement conventions for slurs
The staff-relative placement of slurs, and therefore their curvature direction, depends on the
stem direction of the notes within the slur. Depending on whether slurs are placed on the
notehead or stem side of notes, their endpoint positions are different.
Slur direction
A slur on a single staff always curves upwards and is placed above the notes, unless all of the
notes under the slur are up-stem, in which case it curves downwards and is placed below the
notes. If a slur applies to a mixture of up-stem and down-stem notes, it is placed above the staff
and curves upwards.
780
Dorico SE 3.1.10