Tied chords (or not) that change notes
Tied chords (or not) that change notes
Has anyone come across a situation in the sheet music where chords are tied together but one of the notes changes from the beginning to the end? I am working on My Country Tis of Thee in the second lesson where this happens. If I can figure out how to post a screen shot in Windows I will share it on here.
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Last edited by mikefrey on Thu May 02, 2019 11:32 am, edited 1 time in total.
- sw1tch73ch
- Posts: 539
- Joined: Tue Oct 18, 2016 1:23 pm
Re: Tied chords that change notes
Possibly only the lower note is tied? Or maybe it's meant to be played slurred? How does it play it in demo mode?
I think if both notes were meant to be tied, the tie would show above the notes, opposite the stems.
I think if both notes were meant to be tied, the tie would show above the notes, opposite the stems.
== Just keep playing. Just keep playing. Just keep playing, playing, playing! ==
-- jbs --
-- jbs --
Re: Tied chords that change notes
sw1tch73ch is right, chord is not tied, only bottom note is
Re: Tied chords that change notes
Thanks for the help, I guess that's the only explanation - only the bottom note is tied and the others get played like regular notes. First time I've seen that. It does play the untied notes individually in demo mode. May be a good idea for a bootcamp lesson.
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Re: Tied chords (or not) that change notes
Mike,
This is fairly common in piano music. Most of the time it's notated as two separate voices, also called "double staving" - putting two lines onto one staff. So the F# would be a down stem and the D to A would be an up stem. But in our software, we don't want to have up stems in the bass clef, because that would cause clutter.
It's probably written this way because the melody plays that D, so we didn't want a voice crossing or double.
Best,
Andrew
This is fairly common in piano music. Most of the time it's notated as two separate voices, also called "double staving" - putting two lines onto one staff. So the F# would be a down stem and the D to A would be an up stem. But in our software, we don't want to have up stems in the bass clef, because that would cause clutter.
It's probably written this way because the melody plays that D, so we didn't want a voice crossing or double.
Best,
Andrew