Skip to main content

Timeline for answer to How can I recreate this measure in MuseScore? by Michael Curtis

Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0

Post Revisions

11 events
when toggle format what by license comment
yesterday comment added ayr Thanks, Michael, I'll work on it.
yesterday comment added Michael Curtis @ayr. Here is a quick topic list to think about: meter type duple, triple, and compound; rhythm: beat, beat subdivisions, beaming, dotted notes, tied notes, tuplets. If you get comfortable with playing around with those elements in Musescore, you will have come a long way on the fundamentals.
yesterday comment added Michael Curtis @ayr, ok, I thought you meant a Musescore tutorial on Youtube. If meter and rhythm notation, and how to work with those in Musescore is unclear, there should be some good tutorials in Youtube.
yesterday comment added ayr That same one from the black metal topic that I sent you yesterday
yesterday comment added Michael Curtis @ayr, what's the URL for the YouTube video?
yesterday vote accept ayr
yesterday comment added ayr @AndrewT. This is the notation attached to the YouTube video. I don't know about the fan notation, as the instrumentalist there is quite strong and should be well-versed in music theory. There might be some nuances to it, considering 3/4 = 6/8 = 0.75. But there might also be an error, I don't know. And here's the original image: freeimage.host/i/fL3MaP1 My previous link doesn't work either.
yesterday comment added Andrew T. @ayr I'm not sure if it's only me, but the linked image cannot be opened ("That page doesn't exist"). Is the tab from original/official sheet? Or perhaps it's a fan-notation?
2 days ago comment added ayr Exactly, I somehow missed it: ibb.co/PzCm6sSt but why then is the tabs not 6/8, but 3/4?
2 days ago history edited Michael Curtis CC BY-SA 4.0
added 278 characters in body
2 days ago history answered Michael Curtis CC BY-SA 4.0