I am so confused!
Whose brilliant idea was it to use the regular slur for the first stanza of lyric, but the broken line slur for subsequent verses?
IT MAKES NO SENSE!
And it totally renders the "auto-slur" useless if you have multiple verses.
PLUS you have to delete by hand all of the broken line slurs and put in all of the slurs by hand in subsequent verses.
Welcome to the forum!
I could be wrong, but it seems to me that Finale is following standard practice:
When the principal text requires a syllabic slur, use a solid slur.
Slurs exclusively for the alternative text are dashed.
Are you saying that the standard practice makes no sense?
I am not sure how to reproduce your problem.
Indeed some of the Finale plug-ins would be better with more options for the user.
Perhaps you should make a feature request about the plug-in Auto Slur Melismas.
Just be careful to explain the issue clearly, with an example - including exact steps to reproduce the example.
You don't have to run this plug-in but, when you do, it gives the exact behaviour that you are describing.
What it does
The Auto Slur Melismas plug-in scans a document for lyric syllables that carry over two or more pitches and adds slurs accordingly. This is a standard practice for notating melismas. After running this plug-in, melismas appear wherever there are word extensions or hyphenated syllables under note changes. After running the plug-in a message appears indicating the number of slurs that were added. Dashed slurs are added for any melisma that applies to subsequent verses (and not the first verse). Solid slurs are always used for the first verse.
As for myself, I've never used it but, if I did, it would be the first verse only. For hundreds of years, hymnals and song books have done without dashed slurs. Singers are never confused by their absence (none of the hymnals I use currently have them). Unfortunately, once Sibelius added this nonsense, everyone else had to have it, too. Like you, I believe that they look terrible and only serve to clutter the page.
So, technically, it's not a problem—it's working as it should—but a Feature Request:
Please give us the option of disabling slurs in subsequent verses when using the
Auto Slur Melismas Plug-in
Dashed slurs do have a traditional place:
a) in a critical edition to indicate editorial slurs and phrase markings not indicated by the composer.
b) under tenuto and staccato notes in string parts to indicate that the bow does not change direction (even then, it's not really necessary as this Beethoven example shows) .
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