Hi, This is a great idea. The problem is that these tempo marks attach themselves to the beginning of the measure. The manual says you can attach expressions to notes, but it doesn't work with these. I tried dragging them around, but the attachment snaps to the next measure, not the next note. The end result is that they all take effect at the same time, so it ends up being a tempo change rather than a rallentando.
Thanks for the help. My brain is fried, and I think it's time I got on with some other stuff for now. There has to be a way of getting this to work... Maybe it will come to me in my sleep or something, Thanks again, Phil. At 02:17 PM 4/7/2013, you wrote: >On 7 Apr 2013, at 1:00 PM, <[email protected]> wrote: >If you really don't care what it looks like, you >can try this: put a real tempo mark (quarter = >whatever) wherever you want to change >tempo. For gradual tempo changes, put a tempo >mark one on every beat (quarter, eighth, >sixteenth). These DO work, at least nearly >always. You can create a silent scratch track >with a string of notes to which to attach the tempo marks. Outside of a dog, a book is a mans best friend. Inside of a dog its too dark to read. Groucho Marx _______________________________________________ Finale mailing list [email protected] http://lists.shsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/finale
