The Instruments panel is a new feature in MuseScore 4. It gives you control over your instruments and some basic staff properties without having to leave the score view. All of the instruments in your score will appear in this panel.
Open the Instruments panel by clicking on the Instruments tab on the left side of the screen:
Click Add. This will open the Instruments dialog (see Choose instruments for more information).
To delete an instrument from the score, select the instrument and click the trash can icon, or press Delete.
Select any instrument and use the ↑ or ↓ buttons to change its position in the score. Alternatively, you can drag the instrument up/down using the mouse.
The visibility of entire instrument staves can be toggled by clicking the eye icon next to an instrument label.
Hidden instruments aren't ever deleted — they are simply hidden. This means they won't be printed, but you can still generate and export parts for them.
This feature might be useful if you have alternative instruments or alternative versions of a part that you'd like to toggle between (e.g. for different performers or instrumental configurations). You might also like to isolate different sections of a larger score (say, for orchestra) without actually deleting anything or generating any new project files.
Click the cog icon to expose settings for renaming your instruments. Leaving any of these fields blank will ensure that no label appears on the score or in the part for that instrument.
To replace an instrument in the Instruments panel:
The Instruments panel can also be used to add staves to an existing instrument and configure some of their basic properties.
Added staves share the same instrument but their notation can be edited independently. Amongst other things, they can be used to create staff/tablature for stringed-instrument players (e.g. guitar, banjo, ukulele etc.).
Certain notational objects on one staff can be made to automatically appear on other staves if they are linked together. Linked staves can be used to create staff/tablature for stringed-instrument players (guitar, banjo, ukulele etc.).
To create a linked staff:
Each stave contains some independently configurable properties. By clicking on the cog icon alongside a staff label (E.g. "Treble clef"), you can:
Learn more about staff customization in Staff/part properties.
The Instruments panel can also be used to delete extra staves from an instrument:
Note: Deleting a staff from an instrument will delete the staff in the main score as well as in any part that the instrument is used.
By default, a score will show all measures of all staves on all pages throughout the score, whether they contain notes or not. However, you may wish to have certain staves appear only on systems where they are needed. You may even wish to have a staff appear or disappear mid-system. MuseScore provides a number of controls for this purpose.
Ensemble scores often typically omit the staves for instruments that are not playing on any given system.
To automatically hide staves on systems where they are empty:
Alternatively, you can enable the Hide empty staves within systems option in Format→Style→Score.
MuseScore will normally continue to show all staves on the first system, in accordance with common convention. If you would like to force MuseScore to hide empty staves on the first system as well, disable the Don't hide empty staves in first system option in the dialog. You can also control whether or not brackets are shown if, for example, only a single instrument from a section is playing, via the Show brackets when spanning a single staff option.
You can specify that certain staves should not be hidden when empty:
For instruments that use two or more staves (like piano, organ, and harp), you may wish to specify that individual empty staves should be shown unless all staves for the instrument are empty. To do this, set the Hide when empty option to Instrument for each of the staves.
In scores where some empty staves are not hidden in general, there may nonetheless be special staves that you wish to only show where needed. For example, this might be a solo part in an ensemble score, or a bass staff in a lead sheet. To set an individual staff to hide when empty without forcing all staves to be hidden when empty:
Film scores and other contemporary scores often use a style of notation where individual measures are hidden when empty. These are sometimes called cutaway scores.
To accomplish this in MuseScore:
If you wish all staves to be displayed in this manner, you can use the Properties panel or the Hide empty staves style setting to hide the staves. However, you will need to set the Cutaway option for each staff individually. You can speed up this process by using the arrow buttons in the Staff/Part Properties dialog:
An ossia is a special type of cutaway staff in which a given musical passage is notated using a small staff above the normal staff, such as to show an alternate interpretation.
These can be created in MuseScore using a combination of features:
If you wish to hear the ossia playback instead of the normal staff, select the corresponding measures on the normal staff and uncheck the Play setting on the Properties panel. Do the same for the ossia staff if you would rather hear the normal staff playback.
Depending on the look you desire, you might also want to hide the initial or final barline for the passage. To do this, select the barline and press V or uncheck the Visible option in the Properties panel.
You may also wish to decrease the distance between the ossia and the normal staff. To do this, use a Staff spacer fixed down from the Layout palette.
MuseScore also allows you to make individual measures invisible on any given staff, whether empty or not.
To set a measure to be invisible on a given staff:
Note: you cannot make a measure invisible on all staves—it must remain visible on at least one.
The Implode command allows you to do either of the following:
All selected notes in the staff are now displayed in voice 1.
The notation initially in the upper staff will now be in voice 1, that from the staff below in voice 2, and so on.
Explode allows you to do either of the following:
The passage in the top staff is copied to each of the selected staves below.
In this case the chords in a selected passage of music are separated into their constituent notes as follows:
Notes: (1) If the selection is all in voice 1, MuseScore will discard the lowest note(s) of any chord that contains more notes than the number of staves in the selection. (2) If the selection is all in voice 1, and If a given chord has fewer notes than the number of destination staves, then notes will be duplicated as needed so that every staff receives a note. (3) Any existing music in the destination staves is overwritten. (4) If you select a partial measure, the explode command will automatically expand it to a full measure.
When a musician is required to double on a different instrument for a section of a piece, the instruction to switch instruments is generally placed above the staff at the beginning of that section. A return to the primary instrument is handled in the same manner.
In MuseScore, the instruction to change to a different instrument is handled by the Change Instrument text element, which is found in the Text Palette. This text element is different from Staff and system text in that it is linked to playback, allowing for a change in sound to the new instrument.
To add an instrument change:
The instruction to change to the new instrument will appear above the selected insertion point in the score.
To remove an instrument change, click once on a Change instrument text element to select it, and press either Del or Backspace.
You can re-label any Change instrument text element in the score by double-clicking on it and entering new text. This will not affect the playback sound of the new instrument.
Playback sounds for instrument changes are reflected in the Mixer as separate channel strips stacked to the right of the primary instrument channel strip. These instruments are labelled in parentheses. You can change the assigned playback library, apply effects, adjust the volume, and mute, solo, and pan these channel strips just as you would any other instrument channel strip. For more information, see the Mixer.
Changing to a different instrument may necessitate the use of different key signatures, clefs, and even staff type. Learn more about changing staff type in Staff type change.
You can change the appearance of a staff mid-score by adding a "Staff type change" element to a measure, and adjusting its properties in the Properties panel. This can be used when changing between pitched and unpitched staves or for various experimental notation effects.
Alternatively, you can drag the symbol from the palette to a measure in your score.
When you alter a "Staff type change" property in the Properties panel, the new value takes precedence over the value shown in the global Staff/Part properties dialog. Only those property values in Staff/Part properties that cannot be changed for the "Staff type change" will be valid throughout the score.
The properties that can be altered for the "Staff type change" in the Properties panel are:
Cue size
Use the Small staff size that is defined for the score
Offset
Displace the staff vertically
Scale
Change the size of the staff using a custom percentage
Number of lines
Change the number of lines making up the staff
Line distance
Change the distance between two staff lines
Step offset
Offset the notes on the staff relative
Invisible staff lines
Toggle visibility of the staff lines
Staff line color
Set the color of the staff lines
Notehead scheme
Specify alternate noteheads such as pitch names or shape note
Stemless
Toggle display of note stems
Show barlines
Toggle display of barlines
Show ledger lines
Toggle display of ledger lines
Generate clefs
Toggle display of clefs
Generate time signatures
Toggle display of time signatures
Generate key signatures
Toggle display of key signatures
The Staff / Part Properties dialog allows you to make changes to the display of a particular staff; and to adjust the name, tuning, transposition, and instrument of the corresponding instrument part.
To open the dialog:
An instrument part often consists of only one staff (e.g. violin, trumpet, flute) but there are notable exceptions. For example, a piano requires two staves—treble and bass; a guitar may need both an 8vb treble staff and a tablature staff, and so on.
The top section of the dialog allows you to adjust many aspects of the appearance of an individual staff. The following options are common to all types of staves:
Clicking on Advanced Style Properties… opens a dialog giving access to advanced display options for the staff. These options will vary depending on the staff type chosen.
At the bottom of the Advanced Style Properties dialog there are a number of buttons which allow you to make changes to the staff display by selecting a different template.
Note: The options available here depend on the type of staff—whether standard, plucked-string staff/tab, or percussion.
To change the template:
Fret marks are the numbers or letters used to indicate the location of notes on the fingerboard. The following group of properties define the appearance of fret marks:
This group of properties defines the appearance of the symbols indicating note values.
The name of the instrument is shown here. To change the instrument,
Note: To disable out-of-range coloration of notes, from the menu, select Edit→Preferences… (Mac: MuseScore→Preferences…), click on the “Note Input” tab, and uncheck “Color notes outside of usable pitch range.”
Set the octave, and up/down interval to ensure that transposing instruments are notated correctly. This is automatically done by the program for most instruments.
For transposing instruments an additional option is shown: "Prefer sharps or flats for transposed key signatures". There are three options:
Staves of fretted, plucked-string instruments have a few extra options in addition to those listed above,
Various types of brackets and a curly brace are provided in the "Brackets" palette.
Brackets/braces are automatically applied when a score is created in the New Score dialog. You can easily change them if the default is not what you want (see below)
To add a bracket or brace to all systems:
Alternatively:
Nested brackets can also be applied using these methods, applying the innermost first and ending with the outermost. The order can be edited subsequently using the "Column" property (see below)
If you select a bracket/brace, you can edit its properties in the Properties panel (sidebar).
Use one of the following methods:
Brackets/Braces also have a few global properties which can be adjusted from the Style menu: