In the
smart shape options you can specify any symbol you like for “octave down”.
There are several third party fonts, such as those by Ansgar Krause, that may
have what you are looking for. Ronald M. Krentzman R&M Music Preparation -----Original
Message----- On the topic
of composers compromising on notation, I'm new to hands-on use of Finale,
having worked only with the other programs until this month, and I'm wondering
about the surprising standardization by Coda of the 8vb symbol. Looking
through all the music I own from all different style periods and countries
prior to 1985 or so, 8----- is by far the most common notation for an octave
below, and I also find a little bit of 8va, 8b, 8vaba, 8ba, and 8vb which was
very uncommon prior to Finale. So far I haven't found anything other than
8--- prior to 1945, though I realize it must be out there. Clearly when
engravers, composers, and copyists had the easy freedom to indicate the
octave-down symbol however they wanted through hand copying or free typesetting
or ordering metal tools, 8vb was almost unknown (with a few exceptions).
Now with the ease of the Smart Shape 8vb, it is automatic to use this
Finale-standard. So composers
who urge for the more traditional 8--- (or 8ba which I personally like in my
own music) instead need to slug their way through it. How do I honor this
composer preference? I wonder what
the rest of you have done about this? Does everybody suddenly genuinely
prefer 8vb (oddly taking the v from the middle of octava, unlike the logical va
which ends the word), or are there workarounds I haven't discovered yet, and
which apparently aren't creeping into use? Or is this 8vb something we just
accept against our preference? Thanks for
any advice on this :-) |
- [Finale] 8vb Daniel Dorff
- Re: [Finale] 8vb Ronald M. Krentzman
- Re: [Finale] 8vb Daniel Dorff
- Re: [Finale] 8vb Richard Yates
- Re: [Finale] 8vb Christopher BJ Smith
- RE: [Finale] 8vb Fisher, Allen