Creating Rubato for playback
Moderators: Peter Thomsen, miker
It's been a long time since I've had to do this in Finale, so long that I've forgotten. I'm using Finale v26.3.1.520 (Windows 10) now and I'd imagine it is different now. How do you create rubato in the Finale playback for a short span of measures.
- Peter Thomsen
- Posts: 6646
- Joined: Fri Jul 25, 2003 6:47 pm
- Finale Version: Finale v27.4
- Operating System: Mac
There are two types of rubato:
1) The tempo is constant, and the solo part is a little ahead of or a little behind the accompaniment.
2) The tempo going up and down, being sometimes a little faster, sometimes a little slower than the “general” tempo.
Which one do you need?
1) The tempo is constant, and the solo part is a little ahead of or a little behind the accompaniment.
2) The tempo going up and down, being sometimes a little faster, sometimes a little slower than the “general” tempo.
Which one do you need?
Mac OS X 12.6.9 (Monterey), Finale user since 1996
Yup, sorry for not being a bit more specific. #2 of what you list is more what I need for this particular example I am working on in Finale. Brief tempo fluctuations over a small span of measures. How do I get the Playback or Expression settings to reflect this?
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- Posts: 432
- Joined: Tue Dec 20, 2016 11:43 pm
- Finale Version: Finale 26
- Operating System: Mac
I needed this in my score the other day and here's how I did it:
I put metronome markings at the exact places where they were appropriate, and then I used an accel. expression and a rall. expression before or after the metronome markings, as appropriate. Then (using the contextual menu, right click? 2-fingertap?) I chose not to show the metronome expressions etc. Then at playback, Finale recognises the hiding tempos and also the hiding accelerando and rallentando expressions. Playback turned out pretty good.
Hope that helps!
Cheerio,
Hector.
I put metronome markings at the exact places where they were appropriate, and then I used an accel. expression and a rall. expression before or after the metronome markings, as appropriate. Then (using the contextual menu, right click? 2-fingertap?) I chose not to show the metronome expressions etc. Then at playback, Finale recognises the hiding tempos and also the hiding accelerando and rallentando expressions. Playback turned out pretty good.
Hope that helps!
Cheerio,
Hector.
For a more precise playback another way would be to use the midi tool to scale or set note duration and/or tempo. The drawback is that the midi changes are only visible while the tool is open, so I usually put a hidden text expression as a reminder.
Finale 27, Windows 10, VST: Vienna Instruments/Ensemble/Synchron, Cubase, Kontakt 5
A quick but not necessarily repeatable method is to use the rubato in the Human Playback. It can be set from 0 to 100%. HP uses some algorithm to assign the exact rubato. I've used a bit now and then but you have little control (except for the overall amount.)