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Viewing and Editing the Performance of Notes
Whether you have imported notes from a MIDI file, or entered notes into a score by recording them from a music keyboard, or by manually entering them with the mouse, Composer offers you many ways to edit how the notes are performed during playback.
With convenient commands that you can apply to one or more selected notes at a time, you can:
Change
the exact time that a note is played without necessarily changing where the note is located in the score.
Lock
the as-performed timing of a selected note, so that when you later edit its rhythm, only the as-notated
location and duration will be changed, and not the performed timing of the note.
Unlock
the as-performed timing of a note, so that you you later edit its rhythm, both then as-notated and
as-performed location and duration will be changed.
Request Composer to analyze
the differences between as-notated durations and as-performed durations of notes in one region of
a song and apply these differences as note duration adjustments to another region of the song.
Edit
the loudness of individual notes. Create crescendos and decrescendos across a range of notes. Increase
or decrease the contrast of loudness between notes.
Add
pitch bends to notes, to simulate the musical effect achieved, for example, by a guitarist when he
stretches a fretted string by pushing against it sideways with his fingers.
Procedures for accomplishing all of the above note editing tasks are described in the topics that follow.
Visit
the MidiNotate forum discussion on this feature (requires connection to the Internet):
Learn
tips from other MidiNotate users.
Ask
a question about this feature.
Offer
tips to other MidiNotate users.
View
and report oftware bugs and documentation errors.
Submit
and review feature requests.
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