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===Example 2. Two-voice organum: "Kyrie, Cunctipotens genitor" ===
===Example 2. Two-voice organum: "Kyrie, Cunctipotens genitor" ===


[[File:SVG Cunctipotens genitor-1.svg|650px]]
[[File:SVG Cunctipotens genitor-1.svg|570px]]
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Revision as of 03:50, 15 September 2020


Musescore Examples: These exercises require basic knowledge of encoding. Each exercise includes a new tool or two! The MuseScore "Play" function is also recommended.


Vocal Music in MuseScore

Vocal music often requires the use of more features of notation software than instrumental music does. In this series of examples we represent a broad selection of samples involving features that are surpass those described in beginners' lessons.

Early Vocal Music

Example 1. Chant, "Ubi caritas" (anonymous)


Tools you need:

  • Method 1: Choose an instrument (here use "voice," which may or may not automatically add the optional vocal tenor clef on the clef) OR
  • Method 2: If not, use “clefs” from the palettes. (click the original clef then double click the treble clef)


User comments:

  • Using ¼ for the time signature produces better spacing.
  • To produce "ummeasured" chant notation, make the time signature, stems, and the bar lines invisible by selecting All -> staff/part properties -> advanced style properties.



Example 2. Two-voice organum: "Kyrie, Cunctipotens genitor"



New feature

  • Spacing (Press Enter)

Review features:

  • Notes
  • Lyrics
  • Chant (Hint: Staff/Part Properties)



Example 3: Two-voice polyphony: Excerpt from the "Duo Agnus Dei II" of the Missa de Beata Virgine by Josquin des Prez


Review features:

  • Notes
  • Clef changes
  • Voices/Layers (necessary for writing two parts on one staff)
  • Slurs

Example 4: Secular monophony: "Sumer is Icumen in"

New features:

  • Dotted notes & rests
  • Spacing – using “Enter” key

Review features:

  • Notes and Lyrics
  • Rests

Example 5: Renaissance polyphony: "Jesu, Rex admirabilis" by Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (Open Score)

  • Choosing Instruments: Choir – Soprano, Alto, and Baritone
  • Taking advantage of same rhythmic values



Example 6: Renaissance polyphony: "Jesu, Rex admirabilis" by Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (Close Score)

New features:

  • Creating a Closed score

Review topic:

Baroque-Era Vocal Music in MuseScore

Example 1: Figured bass in "Dido’s Lament" by Henry Purcell

New feature:

  • Figured Bass – Command + G

Example 2: Roman-numeral analysis in "Dido’s Lament" (Henry Purcell)

New feature:

  • Roman-numeral analysis symbols from the menu - Add -> Text -> Roman Numeral Analysis



Example 3: Chord symbols added to "Dido’s Lament" by Henry Purcell


New feature:

  • Chord symbol: Add -> Text -> Chord Symbol

N.B. The font can be changed so that it recognizes the superscript by changing the appearance from Standard to Jazz in the Style (use Format from the menu).

Instrumental music in MuseScore

Baroque-Era instrumental music

Example 1: Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 in G Major, BWV 1048 (J. S. Bach)


New feature:

  • Subdivisions of one note (using layers)

Features reviewed:

  • Notes
  • Octaves
  • Chords
  • Voices/Layers



Other refinements

  • Parentheses (showing accidentals from the palette)
  • Beams (using palette)
  • Size adjustment, using Format -> Page Settings -> Scaling (e.g. from 1.764mm to 2.364mm)

Example 2: Minuet in G (Christian Petzold), first phrase

New features:

  • Grace Notes, using palette
  • Ornaments: add using search for “Ornaments” in the palette box

Example 3: Minuet in G (Christian Petzold), last phrase

Features reviewed:

  • Ornaments
  • Chords
  • Voices/layers

Classical/Romantic-era instrumental music

Example 1: Symphony No. 41 in C Major ("Jupiter"), K. 551 (W. A. Mozart), arr. for two pianos]



New features:

  • Add staccato: Shift+S
  • Selecting instruments -> Piano & Piano
  • Chossing tempo: (1) choose from the palette, then (2) edit text by double-clicking

Features reviewed:

  • Fingerings
  • New: System Text, choose Text from the Palette
  • Triplets = Add -> Tuplets -> Triplet (or command/control + 3)

Example 2: Piano Sonata No. 8, Op.13 (“Pathétique”), second movement (Ludwig van Beethoven)

File:SVG Piano Sonata No. 8, Op.13 Pathétique -1.svg

New features:

  • Temporary clef change: Drag the clef into the measure (Measure 1 in this case)
  • Modify system breaks: Format -> Add/Remove System Breaks

Features reviewed:

  • Fingerings
  • Tempo setting

Example 3: Melody from Symphony No. 9 (Ludwig van Beethoven)


  • Hint: "Repeat & Jumps" from the Palette

Example 4: Nocturne, Op. 9 No. 1 (Fryderyk Chopin)


  • Hint: Tuplets from before, adjust the numbers of ratio to EIGHTH NOTES.

20th-Century instrumental music

Example 1: "The Peacock" from 3 Hungarian Folksongs, Csík (Béla Bartók)

  • Review: Repeats & Jumps
  • Review: Texts (tempo, expression, staff text, tremolo)
  • Review: Tuplets
  • Review: Accidentals, Articulations
  • Review: Beams
  • Review: Dynamics as well as:
  • New: Crescendo / Decrescendo (Lines from the Palette)
  • New: Time Signature (Palette)
  • New: Look up "arpeggio" from the Palette, add to your Palette
  • New: Tie = select the note(s), press shift and then + key
  • New: Double Dots -> Find the "Basic edited" box on the top left corner, change it to "Advanced"