Home
>
Steinberg
>
Music Production System
>
Steinberg Cubase Studio 4 Operation Manual Studio Manual
Steinberg Cubase Studio 4 Operation Manual Studio Manual
Here you can view all the pages of manual Steinberg Cubase Studio 4 Operation Manual Studio Manual. The Steinberg manuals for Music Production System are available online for free. You can easily download all the documents as PDF.
Page 511
516 Transcribing MIDI recordings Using “Scores Notes To MIDI” For very complicated scores, there may be situations where you have tweaked the parameters for display quan- tize and interpretation as best you can, and you still can’t get the score exactly as you want it. Perhaps one setting works fine in one section of the track and another is needed for another section. In such a case, “Scores Notes To MIDI” will help you out. It changes the lengths and position of some or all the MIDI notes in the...
Page 513
518 Entering and editing notes About this chapter In this chapter you will learn: How to make various settings for how notes are displayed. How to enter notes. How to use tools and settings to make the score as legible as possible. How to set up a split (piano) staff. How to work with multiple staves. Score settings Before you start entering notes, you need to make some initial staff settings in addition to those described in the chapter “The basics” on page 495. To understand why and how these...
Page 514
519 Entering and editing notes Note values and positions Two of the most important settings for entering notes (and the ones you will change most often) are the length of the note (the note value) and the minimum spacing between notes (the quantize value). Selecting a note value for input This can be done in one of three ways: By clicking the note symbols on the extended toolbar. You can select any note value from 1/1 to 1/64th and activate/deactivate the dotted and triplet options by clicking the...
Page 515
520 Entering and editing notes The upper field shows the pitch according to the vertical position of the pointer in a staff. The lower field shows the “musical position” in bars, beats, sixteenth notes and ticks: The relation between beats and bars depends on the time signature: In 4/4 there are 4 beats to a bar. In 8/8 there are eight, in 6/8 there are six, etc. The third number is the sixteenth note within the beat. Again, the time signature determines the number of six- teenth notes to each beat....
Page 516
521 Entering and editing notes Entering notes with the mouse To add a note to the score, proceed as follows: 1.Make the staff active. Notes are always inserted on the active staff. See “The active staff” on page 498 for details. 2.Select the desired note value. See “Selecting a note value for input” on page 519. 3.If you select the note value by clicking on a symbol on the extended toolbar, the Insert Note tool is automatically selected – otherwise select the Insert Note tool from the toolbar or...
Page 517
522 Entering and editing notes Generally the program adds ties where necessary (if a note stretches over a beat), but not always. For more “modern” no- tation of syncopated notes (less ties), you will need to use the syncopation feature, see “Syncopation” on page 510. The same note, without and with Syncopation. If you want a long note to be displayed as two (or more) tied notes, you can use the Cut Notes tool for this. If a note has the wrong accidental, this can be changed. See “Accidentals and...
Page 518
523 Entering and editing notes Using a selection rectangle 1.Click in an empty area in the score with the Object Se- lection tool and keep the mouse button pressed. 2.Drag the mouse pointer. A selection rectangle appears. You can drag to select notes on several voices or staves if you wish. 3.Release the mouse button. All notes with their note heads inside the rectangle are selected. If you want to deselect one or more of the notes, hold down [Shift] and click on them. Using the keyboard By default,...
Page 519
524 Entering and editing notes When moving notes to the left or right using key com- mands, the notes will be moved in steps according to the current quantize value. The keys assigned for up/down nudging will transpose notes in semitone steps. Moving across staves – the Lock button If you are editing several tracks, you may want to move notes from one staff to another. Proceed as follows: 1.Make the desired Quantize settings and select the notes. Make sure to select only notes on the same staff....
Page 520
525 Entering and editing notes ÖThere are also “L” and “P” layer buttons, for the layout and project layer, respectively. Clicking these buttons allows you to lock the layout layer and project layer (see “Background: The different layers” on page 562). Duplicating notes 1.Set the quantize value and select the desired notes. You can duplicate any block of notes, even on several systems at the same time. The Snap mode applies, see “The Snap mode” on page 524. 2.Press [Alt]/[Option] and drag the notes to...