Swing
Playback
To create swing playback (for the entire
piece)
This method is for generating swing feel
from an otherwise “straight” score. (If you’ve used HyperScribe to record
a performance, you can “capture” the swing feel. Make sure Retain Note
Durations is checked in More Quantization Settings and Play Recorded Note
Durations is checked in Playback/Record Options (see Document menu). When you playback,
you’ll hear the music with your original feel, including swing, played
back.)
Note that you can also apply a Swing feel
using the Jazz Human Playback Style which can be configured in the Playback
Settings dialog box.
Swing
is not available with all Human Playback styles.
- From the Window menu, choose Playback Controls.
Playback Controls appears.
- Click the Playback
Settings button. The Playback Settings
dialog box appears Controls expands, offering additional controls.
- From the Swing drop-down
list, choose Standard.
- Click on Play.
To create swing playback (for sections of
the piece)
Use the Apply
Human Playback plug-in to apply Human Playback’s swing interpretation
to a region of your score. To define swing manually with the Selection
Tool, do the following:
- Choose the Selection tool .
- Select a region of measures.
- From the Plug-ins menu, choose Playback, then
Apply Human Playback. The Apply Human Playback dialog box appears.
- From the Apply a Defined Style, choose Jazz
(or another style that incorporates swing).
- Choose Apply Specific Elements and click the
Select button. The More Settings dialog box appears.
- From the Swing drop-down
menu, select the desired swing percentage.
- Click OK and then Apply. Swing playback
has been applied to the selected region. Playback the score to review
the results.
To create swing playback (for sections of
the piece) Expression tool method
Note: In order to apply swing playback with an expression,
Human Playback must be set to None.
- Click the Expression tool . If you
haven’t yet placed the marking in the score, double-click any note or
measure. When the Expression Selection dialog box appears, click the desired
marking, click Edit, and then skip to the instruction marked by the asterisk
(*).
- Click the measure or note to which the tempo
marking was attached. Its handle appears.
- D+double-click the handle. The Expression
Designer dialog box appears.
- Click the Playback/Record Options. The playback
options appear.
- From the Type drop-down
list, choose Swing; then enter a number in the
Set to Value box or select a choice from the Swing drop-down
list. The number you type into the box
indicates a percentage of swing. The larger the percentage of swing, the
more delay before the second note.
- Click OK (or press ENTER).
Any time Finale encounters the expression you’ve just defined when
it plays back your score, the playback will change to reflect the expression’s
swing definition.
To create swing playback (for sections of
the piece) MIDI tool method
Note: In order to apply swing playback with the MIDI tool,
Human Playback must be set to None.
- Click the MIDI tool . Select the region where
you want the playback to have a swing feel. You can select one
measure by clicking, additional measures by SHIFT-clicking, a screenful
by drag-enclosing, an entire staff by clicking to the left of it, or the
entire piece by choosing Select All from the Edit menu.
- From the MIDI tool menu, choose Note Durations.
- From the MIDI tool menu, choose Alter Feel.
Type 171 into the Backbeats By” text box. If you enter a number
larger than 171, your swing effect approaches a dotted-eighth/sixteenth
feel, which is useful in slower swing tempos; if you enter a number smaller
than 171, the swing effect approaches an even-eighth-note feel, which
might be better at faster tempos.
- Click OK (or press ENTER).
When you play back the selected region, you’ll hear genuine swing—Finale
is playing the second eighth note of every eighth-note pair slightly late,
just as a jazz player would.
Note: These instructions assume that the
time signature is 2/4, 3/4, or 4/4; the “backbeats” that Finale delays
are, therefore, every other eighth note. If the meter is 2/2, however, the backbeats are every quarter note, so the swing
playback you get may seem erratic if you were expecting traditional eighth-note
swing. To solve the problem, change the time signature to a quarter-note–based
one before using the MIDI tool.
Note: Do not use both
MIDI tool Swing and Swing from the Playback Controls, as these effects
are additive.