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Steinberg Nuendo 3 Score Layout And Printing Manual

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    							NUENDODesigning your score: additional techniques 12 – 271
    •If you activate the option “Auto Layout: Don’t hide first staff” in the 
    Preferences–Scores dialog, staves in the very first grand staff will not 
    be hidden, even if they are empty.
    This is useful for example if you are creating an orchestra score, and want to show the 
    complete “layout” of the orchestra on the first page of the score, without hiding anything.
    Bars and Staves
    This is a combination of Move All Bars and Move Staves, plus auto-
    matic calculation of the number of bars across the page - the function 
    tries to optimize the number of bars across the page for each staff 
    (with the maximum number of bars as set in the dialog).
    •The Bars and Staves operation can also be performed by clicking on 
    the Auto Layout button on the extended toolbar.
    For this to work, no staves must be selected (black) – otherwise a “Move Bars” oper-
    ation is performed (see above).
    Spread Page
    This corrects the vertical layout of the staves on the current page, so 
    that they “fit onto the page”. In other words, this removes white space 
    at the bottom of the page.
    Spread All Pages
    This is the same as Spread Page, but affects all pages from the cur-
    rent and onwards.
    Optimize All
    All of the above in one fell swoop. This procedure might take some 
    time but usually yields great results. 
    						
    							NUENDO12 – 272 Designing your score: additional techniques
    Clean Up Layout
    This function allows you to delete invisible layout elements, which in 
    effect restores the score to default settings.
    1.Select “Clean Up Layout” from the Layout Functions submenu on the 
    Scores menu.
    A dialog appears with options as described below.
    2.Turn on the items you want to delete or reset to standard settings.
    3.Click on the This Staff button to clean up the active staff only, or the 
    All Staves button to clean up all staves.
    Option Description
    Hidden Notes Makes all hidden notes permanently visible again.
    Hidden Makes all other hidden objects permanently visible again.
    Quantize Deletes all display quantize elements.
    Layout tool Resets all positions of notes, clefs, slurs and ties altered using the 
    Graphic Move tool.
    Grouping Resets the grouping under beams to standard values.
    Cutflag Deletes all cutflag events.
    Stems/Beams Resets the length of all stems and reset the slant of beams that have 
    been manually adjusted.
    Coordinates Removes all manual spacing of note symbols and slurs. 
    						
    							NUENDODesigning your score: additional techniques 12 – 273
    Breaking bar lines
    Sometimes you may not want a bar line to stretch all the way across a 
    grand staff. In this case you might “break it”.
    Manually
    Breaking bar lines in one grand staff
    1.Select the Erase tool.
    2.Click on a bar line connecting the two staves.
    All bar lines between these two staves (except the first and last) are broken. To break 
    the first or last bar line in a grand staff, you need to click directly on these.
    Before and after splitting the bar lines between two staves.
    Breaking bar lines in several grand staves
    If you hold down [Alt]/[Option] and click on a bar line as above, the 
    corresponding bar lines are broken in all following grand staves. 
    						
    							NUENDO12 – 274 Designing your score: additional techniques
    Re-connecting broken bar lines 
    If you have broken the bar lines, you can use the Glue tool to connect 
    them again.
    1.Select the Glue tool.
    2.Click on one of the bar lines in the staff above the broken bar lines.
    All bar lines between these staves in this grand staff are connected.
    •To re-connect bar lines in several grand staves, hold down [Alt]/[Option] 
    and click with the Glue tool as above.
    The bar lines between the corresponding staves are connected in all following grand 
    staves.
    Automatically
    If you have added brackets for some staves in the Layout Settings di-
    alog (see page 267), you can have bar lines broken between each 
    bracketed “section”, giving a clearer indication of which staves belong 
    together:
    1.Pull down the Scores menu and select Notation Style from the Global 
    Settings submenu.
    2.Select the Switches tab.
    3.Locate and activate the option “Break Bar Lines with Brackets”.
    •The option Break Last Brackets determines whether the breaking of 
    bar lines should also apply to the bar line at the end of each row. 
    						
    							13
    Scoring for drums 
    						
    							NUENDO13 – 276 Scoring for drums
    In this chapter you will learn:
    •How to set up the score drum map.
    •How to set up a staff for drum notes.
    •How to enter and edit drum notes.
    •How to use a single line drum staff.
    Background: Drum maps in the Score Editor
    When scoring for drums, you can assign a unique note head to each 
    pitch. There is even the possibility to set up different note heads for 
    different note values!
    However, in order for you to make full use of this fact you need to un-
    derstand a bit about drum maps, and the interaction between these 
    and the Score Editor.
    The “score drum map”
    Nuendo handles drum editing by assigning drum maps with named 
    drum sounds (this is all described in the “MIDI Editors” chapter in the 
    Operation Manual). In the Score Editor, an “additional” map is needed 
    to display different note heads for different pitches. This “score drum 
    map” can be looked upon as an extension to the drum map assigned 
    for a MIDI track.
    This means there is one score drum map (with separate settings) for 
    each “regular” drum map in the project.  
    						
    							NUENDOScoring for drums 13 – 277
    You access the score drum map from the Global Settings submenu 
    on the Scores menu.
    Pitch vs. Display Pitch
    In the Score Drum Map Settings dialog you will find a Pitch setting 
    and a Display Pitch setting.
    •The Pitch setting corresponds to the I-note for the drum sound and cannot be 
    edited here.
    •The Display Pitch value is used to set where vertically on the system the note 
    should be displayed. It can be thought of as a display transpose setting that is 
    individual for each note. Again this only affects how the note is displayed, not 
    how it is recorded etc. 
    						
    							NUENDO13 – 278 Scoring for drums
    Use Score Drum Map on/off
    For the drum map settings to actually be used in the score, you need 
    to activate the Use Score Drum Map checkbox. This is found in two 
    places: in the Staff Settings dialog (Options tab) and in the Score 
    Drum Map Settings dialog. Note that these two checkboxes are dupli-
    cates – activating one of them will automatically activate the other and 
    vice versa.
    Edit in Scores
    This is displayed on page 281. 
    						
    							NUENDOScoring for drums 13 – 279
    Setting up the drum map
    Basic settings
    1.Open the Score Editor for the drums track.
    This should be a MIDI track for which you have assigned a drum map.
    2.Select Drum Map (Scores–Global Settings).
    The Score Drum Map Settings dialog appears.
    3.If “Use Score Drum Map” isn’t active, turn it on.
    •When “Use 
    Score Drum Map” is activated, selecting a note in the 
    score will automatically select the corresponding sound in the Score 
    Drum Map Settings dialog.
    This helps you find the desired sounds quicker.
    4.Make settings for the sounds/MIDI notes you need.
    The options are described below.
    Again, please note that there are as many score drum maps as there are 
    regular drum maps in the project. Which one you get depends on which 
    drum map is assigned for the edited track. The score drum maps are to-
    tally independent of one another. In other words, each pitch can have 
    different settings in different drum maps.
    Option Description
    Name The name of the drum sound in the map.
    Pitch This corresponds to the I-note of the sound in the drum map, and can-
    not be edited here.
    Disp. The display pitch, i.e. the pitch at which the note will be shown in the 
    score. For example, you typically want all three hi-hat sounds to be 
    shown on the same system line in the score (but with different symbols). 
    Therefore, you set these to the same display pitch.
    Head Clicking in this column opens a window in which you can select a note 
    head symbol for the sound. If “Use Head Pairs” is activated above, you 
    will select a note head pair instead.
    Voice This allows you to make all notes with this pitch belong to a certain 
    voice, so that they get e.g. a common rest handling and stem direction. 
    						
    							NUENDO13 – 280 Scoring for drums
    Initializing the display pitches
    If you click the “Init. Disp. Notes” button, all display pitch values are 
    reset, so that actual pitch and display pitch is the same for each 
    sound/note.
    Using note head pairs
    Not only can you have different drum sounds displayed with different 
    note heads, you can also display different note heads for different 
    note values:
    1.Activate the “Use Head Pairs” checkbox.
    The “Head” column now shows two heads for each drum sound. 
    As you can see, all head symbols are arranged in pairs – by default an “empty” head 
    and a “filled” head. Just as with regular notes, the “empty” note heads are used with 
    half notes and larger note values, and the “filled” heads are used with quarter notes 
    and smaller note values.
    2.To select a head pair for a drum sound/note, click in the Head column 
    to pull down the pop-up menu as usual.
    You will only be able to select the left note head in the Head column (the one used for 
    half notes and longer) – the right note head is automatically selected. 
    						
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