This entry provides instructions for transposing the key of a piece (or part of a piece). If you want to transpose a passage without changing the key signature itself, see Transposing: by interval. If you want to find out about transposing instruments, see Transposing instruments.
To transpose a piece (Key Signature tool)
To transpose an entire piece or a region, see Key signatures.
To enter pre-transposed music onto a transposing staff (step time)
The following instructions show you how to specify that the notes you’re entering have already been transposed—for example, if you’re copying an existing score.
In this mode, any new notes you enter with either step-time input tool (Simple or Speedy) are considered already transposed. In other words, if you play a C on the MIDI keyboard, it appears as a C on the transposed staff, even though it will play back as some other note, because you’ve just entered a written C.
Any music you enter with either step-time input tool is now considered at concert pitch; when you turn Display in Concert Pitch off, it will be appropriately transposed.
To enter pre-transposed music onto a transposing staff (real time)
Once you’ve created a transposing staff, PrintMusic assumes that any notes you enter with the HyperScribe tool are non-transposed (that is, they’re concert pitches). You may occasionally want PrintMusic to assume that the notes you’re entering have already been transposed—for example, if you’re entering an existing score into PrintMusic. There’s no specific way to let PrintMusic know that your real-time music input has already been transposed; the solution, then, is to go ahead and enter them, letting PrintMusic transpose them again, so that the temporary result is that all the notes are too high (or too low), then manually transpose the incorrectly transposed notes back to their correct written pitches.
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