![]() ![]() (if you are writing for saxophone or clarinet, you may want to review this post.) If you are interested in hearing how Sibelius 7 (and 6) plays the two above examples back, click the waveform to download the mp3 files: In order to get the desired gliss playback, which is both later and faster (at least in the jazz interpretation of it), the half note needs to be divided into a dotted quarter tied to an eighth, with the gliss attached to the eighth note per the notation in Ex. ![]() Using the desired (and typical jazz) notation style, how do I get a gliss to start at the end of a note (without resorting to tied subdivisions)?Ī: In the example below, Sibelius’ gliss playback starts right on beat one of bar 2, at the start of the half note, and extends across the full two beats. Q: Sibelius gliss lines always start playing from the beginning of the note they are attached to.
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