To record a performance
- Create an empty score; establish the meter,
key signature, and configuration of staves. You can transcribe
onto one or two staves at a time.
- Click the HyperScribe tool and select Transcription
Mode from the HyperScribe menu. Click the measure at which the transcription
will begin. You enter the Transcription window.
- Click Wait Till. Finale is in “pause”
mode. The recording begins with the first note you play (or any other
MIDI signal—be careful not to use the sustain pedal until you’re ready
to record).
- Play your piece. Click anywhere (except on
a button) to stop recording. When you stop recording, you’ll see
your music expressed as a sort of horizontal bar graph; the length of
the bars indicate the notes’ durations, and their relationship to the
piano keyboard indicates their pitch.
Tip. if your performance
begins with a pickup measure, fill the first part of the measure with
“dummy” beats; the Transcription window always transcribes on the assumption
that the first note is beat 1.
- If you want to preserve your performance as
a sequence, choose File > Save As. Note that as far
as Finale is concerned, the Transcription window is a different program.
The File menu’s commands (New, Open, Save As) no longer refer to the Finale
document (notation) you currently have open. They refer instead to the
performance, or sequence, you just recorded. If you choose File > New, for example, you’re specifying a new sequence; you’re not creating
a new Finale (notation) document.
When you save your Transcription window
performance, you create a special Finale file called a Note File. When
you exit Finale and return to the desktop, you’ll notice that your note
file has a different icon. You can open this file any time you’re in the
Transcription window; you can, for example, record a piece today, save
it, and transcribe it tomorrow.
- To play your performance back, choose Edit > Select
All. The display area is highlighted.
- Under the word Keyboard, click Play; then click
Start. Finale plays back your performance.