

neither of these changed the tempo setting upon pressing record.
#Dorico properties panel manual
The manual steered me towards notation panel and the properties panel. I finally figured out I could right click and drag the numbers. He started working with Sibelius for Acorn in 1998, aged 10, and has gradually shifted to Dorico over the past two years.Also…I know you hate me already…I kept messing with the tempo setting near the transport buttons. Leo Nicholson is a classically-trained pianist, arranger and music copyist based in the U.K. They always show correctly in parts, even transposing parts – see this Clarinet trill in the score on the left, and in the part on the right. In Dorico, trills play back correctly without any tweaking or workarounds. You can also Save as Default (using the button in the bottom left corner of the dialog) and these defaults will apply to any new projects you create. Whether auxiliary notes should be parenthesised etc.
#Dorico properties panel full
The obvious choices are the ones I’ve already mentioned, but you also have full control over whether Dorico restates trill accidentals at system breaks, the exact syntax displayed in Hollywood Style trills (½ or H.T.), “Hollywood” Engraving Options for Trills All of the options in the properties panel are duplicated here, but will apply to all existing default trills in a project and any new ones you later create. To do so, type Ctrl/Cmd+Shift+E, then select Ornaments from the left panel. It’s probably much more important to acquaint yourself with the Ornaments section of Engraving Options, which allows you to set the way you want trills to display globally.

It’s worth having a good rummage in the properties panel as there’s a whole host of other options available to you. If you’d rather Dorico displayed these intervals using the intervalic distance, flick the Appearance switch and set it to Hollywood Style. If you then select the B and change it to an A, Dorico knows that a minor 2nd is now to a B flat, and changes the symbol automatically. If you flick the Interval switch and select Minor from the dropdown, you’ll see that Dorico displays a natural above the trill.Īgain, Dorico’s being intelligent here – it knows that the trill is attached to a B and thus the minor 2nd is to a C natural. With our first example – a B natural to C sharp trill in D major – Dorico doesn’t bother to show an accidental. For commercial scores, you also frequently see the trill-to note indicated as an intervalic distance, like a ½ step or a whole-tone (wt).ĭorico’s factory default is to display accidentals above the trill symbol, where necessary and as determined by the key signature. For these, you’ll need to use the Interval dropdown in the properties panel.Īnother method of displaying trills, which is very common in popular and commercial orchestral music as well as film and video game scores, largely because it is so efficient for entry, is to include a flat, natural or sharp symbol above, or just to the right of the “tr” symbol. Note that if you’re working in a microtonal context, Dorico can handle microtonal trills too. Oh, and you can type negative intervals too, if you want a trill that falls rather than rises. M = Major, m = minor, p = perfect, a = augmented and d = diminished. Invoke the popover using Shift+O, type tr (for trill), space, and then your interval. What’s even better is that you can tell Dorico the interval while you’re still in the popover. Note that in this situation you don’t need to fiddle with the Accidental switch Dorico knows that in these circumstances it must show the natural. If, instead, you want a B to C natural trill, you can flick the Interval switch and select Minor from the Interval dropdown. If you want to show this explicitly, you can flick the Accidental switch and then click the Show button. From here, select Auxiliary Note.Īs you can see, Dorico has taken the key signature into account and assumed you want a B to C sharp trill.

To display a parenthesized auxiliary note, select the trill itself, move down to the properties panel and flick the Appearance switch a dropdown will appear. If you’re working with defaults you should see something like this: Input the main note, invoke the Ornaments popover (Shift+O) and type tr followed by Return. In contrast to Finale and Sibelius, this is easy to implement in Dorico 2.2. This is an extremely clear and elegant way to present the trill-to information. One way is to indicate the trill-to pitch as a stemless, cue sized note in a parenthesis.

There are a couple of common approaches for indicating trills with specific trill-to pitches in your music score.
