Christopher Smith has given you one possible reason. My suggestion is that you might be using a slur instead of a tie. They look the same when placed over two notes of the same line/space on the staff but they carry very different instructions for playback. So first make sure you've got a tie and not a slur.
If you really are using a tie in those situations, use the speedy entry tool and place the cursor on the offending note (the 2nd one in the tie, the one playing back incorrectly) and hit the * key. It will show or hide any accidental that may be assigned to that note. You can then add the correct accidental and hide it if you need to in order to get proper playback and still have it appear correct on the page. David H. Bailey On 11/14/2017 4:25 AM, Martin Nickless wrote: > Hi there > Can some one please help > I have just finished a score > When I played it back > I heard some strange notes > I noticed notes that were tired for example > Say an Eb or any note with an accidental wasn’t playing the accidental on the > second half of the tie therefore sounding E natural > My concern is when the parts are printed and transposed this error will also > be in the parts > Can someone advise if this will be the case > Thanks greatly > Martin > > > Sent from my iPhone > _______________________________________________ > Finale mailing list > Finale@shsu.edu > https://lists.shsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/finale > > To unsubscribe from finale send a message to: > finale-unsubscr...@shsu.edu > -- ***** David H. Bailey dhbaile...@comcast.net http://www.davidbaileymusicstudio.com _______________________________________________ Finale mailing list Finale@shsu.edu https://lists.shsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/finale To unsubscribe from finale send a message to: finale-unsubscr...@shsu.edu