T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1497.1 | which pc? | TIGER::JANZEN | Tom 296-5421 LMO2/O23 | Thu Jun 30 1988 13:34 | 3 |
| Do you mean I*M PC? or any personal computer? Deluxe Music
ConstructionSet on the Amiga has music notation input.
TOm
|
1497.2 | Check out "Score" | CLULES::SPEED | If it doesn't rack, it doesn't roll | Thu Jun 30 1988 13:43 | 8 |
| There is a new program called "Score" from the IBM PC which does
what you are talking about. It appears very capable but also very
complex.
There is a review in this month's issue of _Keyboard_ magazine.
Good luck,
Derek
|
1497.3 | SORRY, it IS an I*B-PC clone | NYJMIS::PFREY | | Thu Jun 30 1988 13:53 | 8 |
| YES, I meant IBM (it's SO hard to say it) PC, or compatibles.
I will check out this months Keyboard (that is the ONLY mag we
don't subscribe to)(at least it seems that way) for that SCORE
review. I guess I should take the time to check the last six
months MUSIC TECHNOLOGY, ELECTRONIC MUSICIAN, etc. etc.; since
I usually save a years worth..
|
1497.4 | Finale | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - DTN 433-2408 | Thu Jun 30 1988 14:56 | 5 |
| There is another product out for the Mac (and soon to be I*M) called
Finale. There have been two page ads in the last two issues of
Keyboard. The thing is quite pricey, though (ca. $1K).
-b
|
1497.5 | Jim Miller's Personal Composer | NRADM::KARL | | Thu Jun 30 1988 15:37 | 15 |
| I use Jim Miller's Personal Composer (for IBMs and compatibles).
I highly recommend it for inputting notes, as you want to do. It
can be had from Musication in New York City for around $400.00. It's
quite a versatile piece of software and does complex sequencing/
editing as well. Keyboard magazine always has a full page add in
it (under Jim Miller, I believe, in the advertizers index in the
back).
Musication has the best price that I know of. By the way, Score,
mentioned in a previous note, seems to have good specs also, although
I haven't used it.
Good luck!
Bill
|
1497.6 | strong reply from experience | SUBSYS::ORIN | AMIGA te amo | Fri Jul 01 1988 17:25 | 16 |
| I mentioned in an earlier note that I was working with a prof from Worcester
State College using MESA. I highly recommend that you avoid this product like
the plague!
reasons...
high price
poor documentation
no support
*VERY* user unfriendly
We finally got it working, but it is very difficult to use. I can't imagine
why Roland has chosen the IBM PC as its only official software system? Put
it back in the office and get an AMIGA!
dave
|
1497.7 | More about Personal Composer | NRADM::KARL | | Fri Jul 01 1988 20:09 | 28 |
| I'd like to make another comment about Personal Composer (note .5).
It seems to work very well in extracting parts from a score, creating
a new file with just the part you have extracted. If your score
extends over several pages, it leaves each line exactly as you have
entered it, but just compacts it onto however many number of pages
you'll need for this particular part.
You can then transpose the part up or down, and print it. This,
to me, is a real compositional time saver. You can input the parts
manually as you are describing, play them back through a
synthesizer(s), extract, transpose, and print parts. It also supports
Post Script Laser printing, which from the examples looks pretty
darn good.
The part I don't like about this software is that when you do it
the other way, that is, play a melody and convert it TO a score,
Personal Composer only puts 2 measures on a line, which is not the
way the real world works. Four measures per line would seem more
reasonable.
Also, the documentation is incredible - I think it's about 5 or
600 pages or so, and well written. There are so many features, that
it would take some time to learn the entire system.
Bill
|
1497.8 | OK it's not a PC answer | ANGORA::JANZEN | Tom 296-5421 LMO2/O23 | Fri Jul 01 1988 22:53 | 12 |
| I know this isn't the question, but anyway Deluxe Music for the
Amiga can also select staffs for printing as parts, and it also
has adjustable bars per line. I usually use one because my music
, is often fairly complex. Sometimes I temporarily use say 8 bars
per
line to see the big picture, although everything gets squished.
It can also transpose a whole piece up and down; I did it last night
It has a fairly compact manual, in part
because it runs on a system called Intuition (the window system)
and is easy to learn.
Tom
|