A tie is a curved line between two notes of the same pitch, indicating that they are to be played as one note with a combined duration (see below). Ties are normally created between adjacent notes in the same, but MuseScore also supports ties between non-adjacent notes and between notes in different.In, if you specify a tie immediately after entering a note or chord, the program automatically generates the correct destination notes to go with the ties. Or, you can simply create ties 'after the fact,' between existing notes.Note: Ties, which join notes of the same pitch, should not be confused with, which join notes of different pitches and indicate legato articulation. Tie notes together.Press Esc to make sure you are not in note input mode.Click on a note, or use Ctrl (Mac: Cmd) + click to select more than one note.Press + or the tie button.Ties will be created between the selected note(s) and the following note(s) of the same pitch. Tie chords togetherTo tie all the notes in a chord at once, either:.
Click on the stem of the chord, or. Hold down Shift and click on any note in the chord.Then press + or the tie button. Ties will be created between all the notes in the selected chord and the following notes of the same pitches.Add tied notes in note input modeTo create a single note tie during:. Select a single note (one that is not part of a chord). Select a new for the following note, if required (but see 'Note' below). Press + or the tie button.Note: This shortcut works, as described above, only if there is no chord following the selected note. If there is, then the duration is ignored and the tied note is added instead to the following chord.
Add a tied chord in note input mode. Make sure one note is selected in a chord. Select a new for the following chord, if required (but see 'Note' below). Press + or the tie button.Note: This shortcut works, as described above, only if there is no chord following the selected note. If there is, then the duration is ignored and the tied notes are added instead to the following chord. Tied unison notesIf the chords to be tied contain unison notes the best way to ensure correct notation is:.
A 'tie' is a similar curved line that joins two notes of the same pitch. The second note is a continuation of the first: A slur may be hard to distinguish from a 'phrase mark,' which looks like a slur but may cover a longer passage and really just indicates that this is one phrase, like a phrase in spoken language.
Assign each note of a unison pair to a separate voice. Ensure that one of the unison pairs is set to 'stemless' (to remove the duplicate stem and tail).
Apply the ties voice by voice. Make adjustments for position, length as required.Flip a tieX flips the direction of a selected tie, from above the note to below the note, or vice-versa. See alsoExternal links. at Wikipedia.
A tied to aIn, a tie is a curved line connecting the heads of two of the same, indicating that they are to be played as a single note with a equal to the sum of the individual notes'. A tie is similar in appearance to a, however slurs join notes of different pitches which need to be played independently, but seamlessly.The tie shown at right connects a (crotchet) to a (semiquaver), creating a note 5⁄ 4 as long as a quarter note, or five times as long as a sixteenth note—there is no single to express this duration.
However, in some cases one might tie two notes that could be written with a single note value, such as a quarter note tied to an eighth note (the same length as a ). This might be because:.
A is between the notes.