Easy Articulations -- Tom's Top Tip #6

by Tom Johnson 13. October 2009 07:30

In the course of my travels I talk to Finale users almost every day, and I love sharing the tips I've picked up along the way. I'm delighted when someone's face lights up as they realize how a specific tip is going to radically simplify their workflow, and it's been my plan to share a top ten list of those tips that most often get this kind of OMG reaction.

Back in September I shared the first three of my top ten tips, and then a few weeks later added number four (on QuickStart Videos) and number five (on SmartFind and Paint). Today, for number six, I have some articulation entry tips which, if they're new to you, should save you a bunch of time and will likely make your top ten list as well.

Occasionally I get a chance to see folks use Finale for the first time. It's fun to see how they quickly intuit how to enter notes and more. But get to the point where they're adding staccatos to several notes in a row and it's laborious - one dot at a time. So I share this tip:

  1. With the Articulation tool selected, hold down "s" while you click and drag to surround some notes. Voilà - a staccato immediately appears over them all.

That's it, there's no step two! Of course the "s" stood for staccato, right? The epiphany comes when you realize there are probably other common-sense shortcuts too, like "a" for accent, "t" for trills, "u" for upbow, and "f" for fermata.

To learn the shortcut key for any articulation just double-click on a note (when in the Articulation tool) to get to the Articulation Selection dialog box. Here every articulation appears in its own little box (kind of like the Hollywood Squares without Paul Lynde). In the upper right-hand corner of each box is the shortcut key, so if you forget that "8" is the key to press for tremolo ("t" was already taken for trill), you can always look it up here.

Okay, one more related tip. Let's say you want to put a staccato on all the quarter notes in several measures of your piece, but not on the eighth notes. Is there an instant way to do this? Yes!

  1. With the Articulation tool chosen, drag-select the desired region of your score - the Apply Articulations dialog box appears.
  2. Click Select then double-click on the desired articulation (in this case the staccato).
  3. Under Apply Articulation to select Notes within the range of durations and indicate the shortest note on top (in this case a quarter) and the longest note you wish to impact on the bottom (in this case a quarter too), then click OK.

Now your staccato appears on only the quarter notes in the measures you specified!

Both these tips are great timesavers and are easy as well. Creating great-looking scores quickly AND easily is what Finale is all about.

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Tom Johnson

Comments

9/27/2009 1:26:35 AM #

Brian Megilligan

It hadn't occurred to me that dragging while holding down an articulation shortcut key would activate that articulation on all the notes you select. Up to this point, I've just been holding down the "S" and clicking on each note head.

Great tip!

The other thing I thought you were going to say (and a tip that works with the expression tool as well), that you can assign those shortcuts just as easy as you can using them.

With the appropriate tool selected, shift-click the letter or number you want. The dialog box appears, pick the articulation or expression you want to associate with that key and from that point on, clicking on a note while holding down that key will evoke the thing you've just assigned.

I have assigned the dynamics to numbers that make sense to me. That way, anywhere in my score, I can click the corresponding number and place and it pops up. For example pp is 2, p is 3, mp 4, mf 5, f 6, ff 7  and I use 9 for fp.

Brian Megilligan United States

10/12/2009 7:30:35 PM #

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Finale Quick Tips: One-Click Mid-Measure Clef Changes

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