I think that by the time you go through and edit your note durations so that they make sense on paper you would probably be better off. I'm speaking from experience here. You really need to hold notes out to their full rhythmic values or you'll get some pretty strange looking notation with whole notes tied to 16th notes in the next measure or double doted quarter notes followed by a sixteenth note rest, stuff that folks who are trying to read the music will not like at all. Gord ----- Original Message ----- From: Omar Binno To: ddots-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Wednesday, October 24, 2007 12:57 PM Subject: [ddots-l] Re: question So you're saying to redo the entire song? Omar Binno www.omarbinno.com ----- Original Message ----- From: Gordon Kent To: ddots-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Wednesday, October 24, 2007 12:46 PM Subject: [ddots-l] Re: question Omar: I think that you would be better off reentering the data with notation in mind. Playing for performance and playing for notation are two different animals. A project played for performance will most likely be unreadable when displayed as notation because notes are never played to their full values and there are going to be timing issues that will generate very strange notation. GOrd ----- Original Message ----- From: Omar Binno To: ddots-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Monday, October 22, 2007 12:50 PM Subject: [ddots-l] question Hello, One of my former artists needs one of the songs her and I recorded translated into notation. I used Sonar to create the music. How would I get it into notation for her? Thanks. Omar Binno www.omarbinno.com