User manual

Table Of Contents
Voices
For many instruments, such as ute or trombone, each staff usually contains a single musical line
in a single voice that is read from left to right along the staff. When multiple, independent lines
must be shown in a single staff, each line can be a separate voice.
The most common use for showing multiple voices in a single staff is in vocal music, when the
soprano and alto lines share a single staff and the tenor and bass lines share another staff.
Showing each vocal line in its own voice helps to separate the lines, making the music easier to
read and making the shape of each melodic line clear.
In Dorico Elements, you can create as many voices as you like on each staff. Each voice has its
own color, which you can see if you show voice colors. This can help you to keep track of which
notes are in which voices if there are multiple overlapping musical lines in your project.
Voices in Dorico Elements are divided into up-stem voices and down-stem voices. Stems of notes
in up-stem voices point upwards, while stems of notes in down-stem voices point downwards.
However, in bars where only one voice contains notes, stem directions are automatically changed
to the directions they would have if there were only one voice on the staff. By default, the
rst
voice on the staff is up-stem.
Following most notation conventions, rests are shown in bars for all voices that have notes in
the bar. If two or more voices have a rest of the same rhythmic duration at the same rhythmic
position, that rest is consolidated: instead of showing two identical rests, only one is shown.
RELATED LINKS
Inputting notes into multiple voices on page 174
Adding notes above/below existing notes on page 197
Stem direction on page 921
Voice column index on page 999
Implicit rests in multiple-voice contexts on page 881
Moving rests vertically on page 886
Hiding/Showing voice colors
You can show notes in different colors according to their voice, for example, to check which notes
are in which voice. When voice colors are hidden, all notes appear black by default.
Voice colors are randomly assigned, meaning colors do not refer to specic voices. Voice colors
are considered annotations and are not printed by default.
PROCEDURE
Choose View > Note And Rest Colors > Voice Colors.
RESULT
Voice colors are shown when a tick appears beside Voice Colors in the menu, and hidden when
no tick appears.
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Dorico Elements 3.5.12