User manual

Table Of Contents
Unpitched percussion in Play mode
Unpitched percussion instruments are handled differently in Play mode than pitched
instruments. Instead of showing the usual piano roll view, the onset of each note on each
percussion instrument is shown in the drum editor.
You can expand each instrument in a kit at the left end of the track header in order to assign that
particular instrument to another playback endpoint. For example, you can assign instruments to
another channel on the same VST instrument or MIDI output device, or to a different device.
NOTE
The endpoint must have an appropriate selected percussion map.
Notes can be moved in Play mode by dragging them to the rhythmic position you want. However,
like other instruments, you cannot move notes between percussion instruments, even if they are
in the same percussion kit.
NOTE
You cannot change the duration of unpitched percussion notes within Play mode. This is planned
for future versions.
RELATED LINKS
Percussion maps on page 506
Drum editor on page 420
Inputting notes in the event display on page 421
Moving notes in the event display on page 422
Unpitched percussion imported from MIDI les
When importing MIDI les, Dorico Elements optionally interprets music for tracks set to use
channel 10 as drum sets if Interpret channel 10 as General MIDI percussion is activated in the
MIDI Import Options dialog.
NOTE
The MIDI Import Options dialog opens automatically when you open MIDI les in Dorico
Elements.
This is the only condition under which Dorico Elements interprets any music in MIDI les as
percussion.
Unpitched percussion imported from MusicXML les
Unpitched percussion music can be expressed in a number of ways in MusicXML. Scoring
applications take different approaches to what data is exported and how it is encoded. Therefore,
the results of importing MusicXML into Dorico Elements vary considerably.
Dorico Elements identies each instrument in kits explicitly and then combines them dynamically
onto
ve-line staves. Other scoring applications and MusicXML have a different approach to how
unpitched percussion music is represented. For example, a drum set may be effectively notated
as pitched notes on a
ve-line staff and annotated with additional information to help identify
which instrument corresponds to each staff position.
Unpitched percussion
Unpitched percussion in Play mode
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Dorico Elements 3.5.12