Ambience Reverb is quite good, it's just that Finale's default settings are all
messed up -- they are set to 100% wet, 0% dry. They should default to something
closer to 100% dry, 20-30% wet. This setting is saved with the document in
Fin2011 (though you do have to set it once in every new file)
I've only seen fingerings above, and if you want them placed over a
chord like that, you write the fingering for each note in the proper
location:
2
1
3
(or whatever you wish) and the string players will either honor it or
ignore it but at least they'll know that you want the top note fingere
In that case it will be confusing no matter where you put it. I would try
to find a different way of indicating the triplet that didn't require a
number, such as 3 horizontal dots above the note, or writing it out as a
triplet without the stem slash (I assume this is what you mean by
"tremolo").
Thanks for your response. Going further :
- Quarter note up stem with tremolo and number 3 above (eight note tuplet):
fingering above?
- Never along side the noteheads (inside staff) even when double note or
triple note?
Pierre
-Message d'origine-
From: Lee Actor
Sent: Friday, Februa
On 2011-02-25 08:58, Pierre Bailleul wrote:
Do you know the exact placement of single note fingerings: always placed
above the notes or depending stems direction (like articulations)?
In case of up stems tuplet, is it allowed to place fingerings :
- below the notes;
- above the notes with tupl
Almost always above, regardless of stem direction, and above tuplet numbers
and brackets. The only case I can think of where a fingering would go below
is in a divisi orchestral part with 2 voices on one staff, stems up and
stems down.
But as both a violinist with a lot of experience, and as a co
Hi all,
Do you know the exact placement of single note fingerings: always placed above
the notes or depending stems direction (like articulations)?
In case of up stems tuplet, is it allowed to place fingerings :
- below the notes;
- above the notes with tuplet number and bracket below?
Thanks!