This is something you will have to take care of on the keyboard end
of things -- however, most MIDI keyboards include a transposition
function.
- Darcy
-
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Brooklyn, NY
On 09 Aug 2005, at 11:51 PM, Taris Whitepaw wrote:
I'm using FinWin2k2 and I've just recently got ba
> I'm using FinWin2k2 and I've just recently got back into using Speedy
> Entry after many years of not having a MIDI connection. Only one problem
> still plagues me. Is there any way to input notes an octave higher than
> played? My keyboard (which a friend has given me) stops two
> octaves above
I'm using FinWin2k2 and I've just recently got back into using Speedy
Entry after many years of not having a MIDI connection. Only one problem
still plagues me. Is there any way to input notes an octave higher than
played? My keyboard (which a friend has given me) stops two octaves above
mi
On 9 Aug 2005 at 17:18, John Howell wrote:
> It really comes down to what you can discern of the composer's
> intentions. I can envision 6.6.12 working; in fact Rameau did
> exactly this in some dance movements from his operas that I edited,
> and it worked fine with a community orchestra or a
On 9 Aug 2005 at 23:07, Johannes Gebauer wrote:
> Chuck Israels schrieb:
>
> > I think Johannes is right about this, but it is much better. I have
> > mine set to 15 minutes, but 5 would be safer. Still, if it loses
> > things in a process which is going on while it saves, there's some
> > d
Andrew Stiller wrote:
A couple of questions for the list, both about the same 19th-c. orchl.
work that I'm editing.
1) Can any of you think of any example of a musical self-portrait
(especially orchestral) from the 19th c.? 18th c.?
R. Strauss: _Ein Heldenleben_ (A Hero's Life) 1898, seems
Hi Johannes,
The real danger was with autosave and the text block bug (not the
file overwrite bug) in Fin2004. Autosave is not good when working
with multiple files open in Fin2004 for that reason -- the autosave
writes in all the unwanted changes caused by the text block bug,
corrupting
At 1:17 PM -0400 8/9/05, Andrew Stiller wrote:
A couple of questions for the list, both about the same 19th-c.
orchl. work that I'm editing.
2) This composer habitually puts his first violins onto two staves,
labeled Vn.Ia and Vn. Ib. How should the string parts for such a
piece be distribute
Chuck Israels schrieb:
I think Johannes is right about this, but it is much better. I have
mine set to 15 minutes, but 5 would be safer. Still, if it loses
things in a process which is going on while it saves, there's some
danger. Which is less aggravating, having to redo a process in
On 9 Aug 2005 at 22:17, Johannes Gebauer wrote:
> Darcy James Argue schrieb:
> > Hi Chuck,
> >
> > I believe it now works in the background, which I agree is a
> > terrific improvement.
>
> No, it doesn't work in the background, it's just faster. Only today
> Speedy lost some of my notes while
On Aug 9, 2005, at 1:17 PM, Johannes Gebauer wrote:
Darcy James Argue schrieb:
Hi Chuck,
I believe it now works in the background, which I agree is a
terrific improvement.
No, it doesn't work in the background, it's just faster.
I think Johannes is right about this, but it is much be
On 9 Aug 2005 at 16:00, Darcy James Argue wrote:
> I believe it now works in the background, which I agree is a terrific
> improvement.
This might very well be a benefit of the move of much of the
temporary working space from disk to RAM.
I'd be interested to know if under OS X you guys were s
Darcy James Argue schrieb:
Hi Chuck,
I believe it now works in the background, which I agree is a terrific
improvement.
No, it doesn't work in the background, it's just faster. Only today
Speedy lost some of my notes while it was autosaving.
I am pretty sure it is faster because Finale us
Hi Chuck,
I believe it now works in the background, which I agree is a terrific
improvement.
- Darcy
-
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Brooklyn, NY
On 09 Aug 2005, at 12:12 PM, Chuck Israels wrote:
Hi,
Anyone else notice that autosave, which I used to have turned off
because it took a couple of
Chuck:
What interval of time do you have it set at?
Dean
On Aug 9, 2005, at 9:12 AM, Chuck Israels wrote:
Hi,
Anyone else notice that autosave, which I used to have turned off
because it took a couple of seconds to work and could interrupt a
process (like a mass edit) and cause a hang up
Actually, the most- most- most-self-autobio'd
piece I can think of is Strauss' 'Symphonia Domestica' though at 1904 it's
technically 20th Century. So to be strictly 19th Century and
slightly (but only just) tongue-in-cheek, I'd suggest his 1898 Heldenleben;
hero-worship in the first person
PS, funny how I think of those as 19thC - of course I know they're
not.
How about Smetana - "From My Life?" Str 4tet
1876.
Ken
At 12:17 PM 8/9/2005, you wrote:
Aren't they all?
:-) Seriously, the Strauss 4 Last Songs contain a
retrospective of the composer's work, so that's the most
s
Aren't they all? :-) Seriously, the Strauss 4
Last Songs contain a retrospective of the composer's work, so
that's the most self-consciously autobiographical example that springs to
mind.
ken
At 10:17 AM 8/9/2005, you wrote:
1) Can any of you think of any
example of a musical self-portrai
A couple of questions for the list, both about the same 19th-c. orchl.
work that I'm editing.
1) Can any of you think of any example of a musical self-portrait
(especially orchestral) from the 19th c.? 18th c.?
2) This composer habitually puts his first violins onto two staves,
labeled Vn.Ia
Hi,
Anyone else notice that autosave, which I used to have turned off
because it took a couple of seconds to work and could interrupt a
process (like a mass edit) and cause a hang up, now seems to work in
a split second and is nearly imperceptible?
Maybe I can leave it on to do the work i
Has anyone seen any of these problems in finmac (06)? -
Don Hart
on 8/9/05 8:49 AM, Craig Parmerlee at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Gary Griffiths wrote:
>
>> Thank you Darcy and Hiro - Yes I have tried reducing that, no change. Also
>> tried reducing volume in instrument list window and Base Ve
I forgot to say, "First, open the Activities Monitor." Maybe that;s
obvious, but sometimes I don't know what people mean when they
describe things that are so familiar to them that they fail to be
objectively literal in their descriptions of those things which are
unfamiliar to me.
Sorry
Johannes,
That was funny, but you can do this: inside your utilities folder (in
your applications folder) is something called "Activity Monitor."
Click on the tab that says "CPU," and it will show a graph that will
let you know what's going on. I just checked mine (with Finale and
GPO r
Gary Griffiths wrote:
Thank you Darcy and Hiro - Yes I have tried reducing that, no change. Also
tried reducing volume in instrument list window and Base Velocity in
Playback options (what is the difference in these two settings?) and volume
in Windows sound Properties. Shouldn't these all be ov
ROFL :-)
Richard Yates schrieb:
Has anyone checked the CPU usage of Fin2k6 on Mac, without active GPO? I
haven't tested it, but I notice that as soon as I have Finale open my
iBook starts getting warm, which it usually only does under very heavy
workload. How could I test this?
http://www.dru
> Has anyone checked the CPU usage of Fin2k6 on Mac, without active GPO? I
> haven't tested it, but I notice that as soon as I have Finale open my
> iBook starts getting warm, which it usually only does under very heavy
> workload. How could I test this?
http://www.drugstore.com/qxp137569_334918_s
Has anyone checked the CPU usage of Fin2k6 on Mac, without active GPO? I
haven't tested it, but I notice that as soon as I have Finale open my
iBook starts getting warm, which it usually only does under very heavy
workload. How could I test this?
Johannes
--
http://www.musikmanufaktur.com
http
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