T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1617.1 | Can there logically be a Finale V2.0? | JAWS::COTE | I'm not making this up... | Thu Aug 11 1988 10:54 | 11 |
| Is "Finale" the scoring software that was reviewed in Keyboard just
a month or so ago??
While it did seem to be able to produce just about any score you
could imagine, I was decidedly unimpressed with the fact that it
does NOT produce scores from a sequence.
For an arranger/'scorer' this SW may be the be-all, but for me
it looked like $1000 that could be better spent...
Edd
|
1617.2 | Where your money goes.... | DSSDEV::HALLGRIMSSON | Eir�kur, CDA Product Manager | Thu Aug 11 1988 13:05 | 13 |
| An interesting tidbit about Coda, makers of Finale: They did a
huge press party at the Marriot Long Wharf on Tuesday night.
Conflicting (!) with the Apple/DEC joint press announcement of support
for software developers. I was there. This schedule conflict was
a really strange oversight, if it was that. They also spent a bundle
on renting the ballroom, catering, etc. Their handout was extremely
fancy, color cover folding into a locking envelope, etc.
It sounds like a nice product, gee, I wish we didn't have to pay
for the hype. I probably won't.
Eirikur
|
1617.3 | | NIMBUS::DAVIS | | Thu Aug 11 1988 15:23 | 10 |
| RE: .1
>> does NOT produce scores from a sequence.
The Globe article talked about a demo with a MIDI keyboard, so it
sounded like it would produce a score from MIDI input. That's about
all I know about it, the article was real superficial. Anyone going
to Macworld?
Rob
|
1617.4 | I saw it a MACworld & was impressed | BOHR::CASSONE | Dom Cassone UPO1-3 DTN 296-4797 | Thu Aug 11 1988 15:34 | 17 |
| I sat through the demo of finale at MACworld yesterday. I was quite
impressed. They even said that they were currently doing a port
to the PC. The demo included setting up the basic staff with time
signature, key etc. Playing a Kurzweil, through a MIDI interface
into Fanale (which scorded it on the screen, one measure behind
realtime). Then the score was played back from the MAC to the
Kurzweil. Next the demoer added some expression (like p,mf, and
Alegero) to the score in the proper places. He fixed some notes
that were mis-interpted (he didn't paly a note long enough so the
software generated an eighth-noe with an eighth-rest rather than
a quarter note). The piece was replayed, sounded much better.
Lastly, he titled the score and printed it on a Laserwriter.
He briefly showed some of the products other features, and I was
quite impressed.
Dom
|
1617.5 | | HPSRAD::NORCROSS | | Thu Aug 11 1988 16:22 | 11 |
| > I sat through the demo of finale at MACworld yesterday.
Yesterday?? I thought MACworld was today, tomorrow, and Saturday??
I'm going to try to get there tomorrow.
I think Finale has been advertised in the keyboard Mags for about a month
or two now. $1000 is way beyond me.
/Mitch
|
1617.6 | | DFLAT::DICKSON | Koyaanisqatsi | Thu Aug 11 1988 17:53 | 1 |
| Is this at Bayside or the WTC?
|
1617.7 | Located in the WTC | BOHR::CASSONE | Dom Cassone UPO1-3 DTN 296-4797 | Fri Aug 12 1988 10:49 | 7 |
| It is at the WTC and I was able to get a couple of VIP passes for
Industry Day which was Wed. I looked through the stuff that they
gave me and they claim that the PC version will be available in
December. I do not know the price but if it is $1K plus a Midi
interface, this is a bit steep! I believe that the Pc version will
run under windows, but since Windows is not listed as a prereq.
they must supply a runtime version.
|
1617.8 | Comments on notation software | AITG::WARNER | | Fri Aug 12 1988 15:44 | 33 |
|
Everybody is SOOOO spoiled! $1000 IS a lot of money, but it would
cost you more than that to have an orchestral score copied. Forget
about trying to transcribe it from a performance....
Mark of the Unicorn Composer costs several hundred dollars and is
practically worthless unless your writing strictly diatonic music;
if this product works as well as it sounds like it does, it's easily
worth the money to people who write music (on paper). Obviously
not, to people who only want to see their own music strictly for
their own amusement.
Regarding MIDI input -> written score: no computer program will
be able to come up with the "best" notational alternative in all
cases. It's really an art -- when do you write F F# F F# F Eb E
-- and when do you write F Gb F Gb F D# E -- etc; this is a SIMPLE
blues lick. Then transpose it for the alto sax!! In addition, the
spelling of notes in a chord should make sense (harmonically) in
the score, but the spelling of notes should make sense in a linear
sense in the individual parts as delivered to the musicians! (i.e.,
in the example above for a blues in C, even though Eb is the #9
for C7 chord, you'd expect to see it written Eb in the score; however,
the musician would probably rather see the D# resolve to E. Any
kind of hard-and-fast rule you could come up with for this stuff
would be hopelessly complicated and have a ridiculous number of
exceptions.
Nonetheless, it's great to just be able to put notes on paper without
getting out the music pen, and edit and print multiple copies.
Now we just need to find some musicians who can read......
|
1617.9 | deluxe music | ANT::JANZEN | Tom 296-5421 LMO2/O23 | Fri Aug 12 1988 16:18 | 17 |
| Hi
In college I taught myself engraving standard music copying.
I used Rapidograph (TM) pens and crowquills and india ink (until
I discovered drawing ink) on vellum.
If you want to see my college scores, prepare for eyes to fall out.
except my printing was never very good.
Anyway, Deluxe Music Construction Construction Set for $70 is good
enough, not engraving standard, has little problems, but
can separate out parts, transpose any selected parts,
print them out with quality depending on your printer.
It's not perfect, but is pretty good. It lets you spell your way
becuase you enter through the score. It runs on the commodore
amiga. At least I have high confidence it prints parts, because
it says it can and because I often display on the screen only
one staff to work faster.
Give it a whirl at a dealer.
Tom
|
1617.10 | See you in Cannes ! | WARMER::KENT | | Tue Aug 16 1988 04:23 | 8 |
|
Sorry if this is off the subject but it didn't seem worth a new
note and we were talking about worlds anyway?
Any other Commusicians going to Decworld next month ?
Paul.
|
1617.11 | I just got it, anyone else using it? | NWD002::EVANS_BR | | Fri Aug 25 1989 11:01 | 27 |
| I just bought Finale.
So far it looks pretty good, although terribly thorough!! You can
do just about anything to anything, hence the complications.
Fortunately, the User manual describes a "structured english" for
doing things to help navigate your way to the desired goal. I have
only a DX11 (ya.....yu....yah....hahaha....maha.... ) but that's
just today, and it let's me start excercising MIDI ideas. Finale
plays back MIDI, but is not a sequencer, and compresses that notation
for playback.
Although I'm just learning, and do not consider myself an accomplished
musician by any stretch of the imagination, I know there is no better
way to learn than to have questions asked, and would welcome dialog
on this package and music notation in general.
My goal (for today) is to put some music I've had laying around into
a publishable state.... perhaps even go so far as to actually publish
them!! I got Finale from Computers and Music, in San Francisco,
and found their people to be objective, helpful, and attentive.
They have a "store hotline",and Finale has one too. There is a book
called "Inside Finale" that I should be getting Real Soon Now (C&M
thinks its in second printing, hence the delay).
Anyone else out there using this package???
Bruce (who-is-pretty-excited-and-struggling-but-finally-having-fun)
|
1617.12 | available for IBMs yet? | NRADM::KARL | It's computerized, no thing c,an go wrong nothing c an g | Fri Aug 25 1989 13:04 | 22 |
| I use Jim Miller's personal composer, which is also one of those
can do everything to some degree kind of packages. I like it except
that there are some limitations as far as page width, among other
things, that Finale is supposed to do better.
I look forward to hearing how you make out with it! Initial reviews
were that, yes, it does do most anything, but is a bear to learn
(can take months), and has default settings that can drive you nuts
- by that I mean it assumes that you want something done in a certain
way, when that assumption is arbitrary, or not true for all people
and/or situations.
Anyway - having said that, I still am comsidering making that my
next major software purchase. Do you know if it's available for
IBM and compatibles (it was supposed to be at some point), and just
curious what you paid for it (I read, I think under the NAMM review,
that the price was coming down to $599.00 (from 1K).
Well - good luck - it's supposed to be a powerful beast!
Let us know how you are making outy with it!
Bill
|
1617.13 | Don't let this bias you, but.... | NWD002::EVANS_BR | | Sun Sep 03 1989 12:55 | 59 |
| re: 1617.12 - for IBM, how is it, cost?.....
You summarized it pretty well!! It _is_ a bear to learn, and there
_are_ arbitrary settings/setups. I read the users manual for 3 nights
before actually doing anything, then when a friend visited and we
tried it for 1.5 hrs.... well: I'm writing a _long_ letter to Coda!!
example #1: select playback tool, Option-drag over music (you hear
notes being played as the cursor goes over them), drag for a while,
and _bang!_ total system freeze. I had multi-finder running.
example #2: we could not ever get a transcription to occur... only
a "trashy" transcription (Coda's words!). Document says further
that once a transcription is done, you can click in the first of
the targeted measures and all measures are "filled in" automagically
-- WRONG! you have to click in EACH measure to fill that one meas
in!! (OK, OK... its a nit!)
examle #3: You can position the instrument name relative to the stave,
but I had "Right Hand" (as the test name) positioned in such a way that
I could not scroll the page to the right, and the name was off the
left!!! Also, this capability is a good example of arcania in
technique. Instead of selecting name(s) on the score image and dragging
them to position, you need to select a tool, select an option in the
tool dialog box which brings up another dialog box (representing your
stave/name relation spaceing), and if you cannot see the stylized "X"
(representing your name), you move the mouse into the box and the "X"
appears (WRONG! you click, then move the mouse in the box). Then
position the "X", and shut down all those dialogs. If you do not like
the name spot, well... do it all again!!!!
There are numerous document discrepancies, it is modal (every tool is a
mode, and there are about 20 tools -- yuch). I think modality is why
MACers do not like it. The reference manual is tool by tool, but
the users guide "blends" tools in a usable way -- only for elementary
things!!
My current "joke": It does not need to be copy protected -- even
_with_ the manuals, I cannot use it!!!!
OK, OK -- flame off. huff huff, puff, puff....... I paid $520 at
Computers and Music (San Francisco, 415-994-2909) which includes a back
ordered book Inside Finale and shipping. Good folks - knowledgable (at
least to me), and they helped me connect my needs to software - they
also warned me copiously about Finale!! But it is the only package that
does the sort of things I need notated. Further, I strongly feel this
is going to get better (about $520 strongly!! :-) ) -- after all, the
things I mentioned above are user interface things, not flaws in
overall program intention/capability -- sure its arcane BUT I CAN AT
LEAST DO IT!!
Dunno about the IBM version. My current thoughts are: if you
need normal western notation, not too complicated, then use
ConcertWare+MIDI (v5.0 is out next month). It reads standard MIDI
files (dunno if Finale does) and v5 will have lots of elementary
Finale stuff in it. It's quantization input is simple, but effective.
Finale is like using Differential Equations versus add/sub/mult/div.
and all this from just 1.5 hrs!!!!!! :-) :-)
|
1617.14 | | KOBAL::DICKSON | | Tue Sep 05 1989 10:43 | 2 |
| I'd be interested in hearing what notational things you need to do that
only Finale can handle.
|
1617.15 | What I'd like | NRADM::KARL | It's computerized, no thing c,an go wrong nothing c an g | Thu Sep 07 1989 16:47 | 23 |
| My main beef with Personal Composer is that you can't have pages
wider than what you see on the screen. This means that if you want
a wide conductor's score, you have to fudge it, as in printing out
two regular size pages and physcically pasting them together, then
photocopying the paste-up, or by using some other fudge method that you
may come up with.
Ideally, I would like a wide page option that you can print out
as a wide page. There is supposed to be a new version of Personal
Composer out soon - I'm hoping for something like this.
The other thing that I'd really like is to be able to change the
default for the number of measures that get created per staff line
when you convert a MIDI recording to score. Personal Composer currently
has a default of two measures per line that you can't change. I input
most of my notes manually, then play back the notated score usually,
(vs. recording in real time and converting to score) so this limitation
doesn't affect me too much.
Anyway, that's my current wish list.
Regards!
Bill
|
1617.16 | response to last 2 notes | NWD002::EVANS_BR | | Sat Sep 09 1989 12:57 | 47 |
| re: .14 what am I doing that only Finale can do...
welll....I'm not all that sure, and having to go on what others
have said to me. I need to construct music using standard clefs,
but meters in the 13/16, 17+23/16, and the like (for intensely curious,
these are old Balkan/Turkish tunes). Also, one of my friends
currently teaches music and asked if these fancy computers can print
out score sheets using only 2 lines/stave, or 4 lines/stave, etc.
Well, now I can say "yes". I am also notating "Non-Western" music,
and so the staff at C&M immediately said: "Finale".
An aside: the Computers& Music fellow said they tried an experiment
and constructed a 12 line stave for guitar score, and Finale operated
across it just fine, then they told it to convert it to 5 lines
per stave, and it all went as expected!! (I know!You all are just
dieing to try that!!! :-)
re: .15 "page width control", "default meas/line"
Just using the on-line help, I cannot see any way to print out score
in Finale on some imaginary paper dimension, however I recall that
you can set up the Chooser, or the application via Resedit to
understand different paper stock (like graph paper from a Versatec!
6' wide) - I refer you to the MACINTOSH notes conference. I've never
done it.
I get the standard dialog about paper sizes that the printer
(Imagewriter/Laser) "knows" about. When I click on Tabloid, it looks
wide, but there is nothing to compare it to (like a ruler!), so
I'll have to dredge up what a tabloid dimension is.....
On the 2 meas/line default: Finale lets you put in as many measures
as you feel you need (or delete, of course), and because there is
only 6 different ways to enter music, I could not begin to tell
you how that affects getting your music notated!!!! :-)
I am trying the HyperTool (Their words!) since it is closest to how I
prefer to enter music: setup synth, setup Finale, either let it
metronome or not, enter music on synth, (if you provide metronome, then
here is where you would "replay" music and supply the beat), tell
Finale to transcribe, and !bang! there it is. Time to edit!!!
In general: It's interesting to encounter a program that is "bigger"
than I am... it makes for an interesting learning curve, and gives
me some confidence I can grow into this package, instead of waiting
for new releases to let me grow further.
Does anyone else in COMMUSIC have Finale????
|
1617.17 | RTFM event occured | NWD002::EVANS_BR | | Thu Sep 14 1989 20:10 | 39 |
| I read the manual (gasp!) just after I enterd the previous reply,
and discovered that Finale allows complete control over page
structure(s). I constructed a 4 part choral (SATB) test piece (27
measures), and the page structure took up 5 pages (mostly due to
my overly wide spacing of the 4 staves). Once I compressed the
music via "Use beat positioning" (instead of the default), and setup
the measures to be as small as reasonable, it only took up a couple
of pages. I was able to indent the 1st set of measures to allow
the voice labels to appear on the side (nice), but discovered that
using the obvious technique of stating the instrument name causes
it to appear on each and every measure "segment" (where the measures
go off the right side of the page, and get relocated to the next
print area). Coda says use a Score Expression instead. sigh.
I also read the part about stave construction, and by golly, you
can make up a stave that has as many or few lines as you feel like.
In fact, the examples were for a Music Instructor who needed to
test students on various parts of music theory by showing one/some
parts of a score, and having them respond with the missing portions.
Whew!
You can establish default or preferred measure sizes, either by
making 1 measure, set the size/attributes, then add more (they get
added looking just like the first one), or use the Measure Attribute
Tool and change each and every measure to be just the way you want
it (haven't tried this on barred staves).
Although Finale does read standard MIDI files, it seems to prefer
having you enter the music in real time via the HyperScribe Tool,
and finalizing (no pun intended) the results then printing the score.
They suggested either playing it, or using another computer to generate
the MIDI signals. I'd like to try entering a standard MIDI file
just to see what Finale does with it.
By the way, the manual made an interesting statement: not many people
are concerned/aware of "good" notation practices. Why?? I can
certainly see where a sequencer gives a more immediate feedback, but I
find it "machine readable" only. Is notation really _that_
difficult?????
|
1617.18 | Late Night Thoughts on Finale's 18th | SALISH::EVANS_BR | | Thu Aug 30 1990 02:49 | 53 |
| I've been playing with Finale some more, and just felt like sharing
this stuff....
I constructed a staff from scratch that played back an octave above the
visual notation. It had a little "8" above the Treble Clef, like it's
supposed to... the only thing of note was that every rest had to be
manually shifted up to visually appear in the staff like you "expect"
it to.
I transcribed a MasterTracksPro MIDI data file into Finale, and
formatted the notes (a waltz) into printable score in about 45 minutes.
To clean it up for publishing, I'd probably spend a total of 4 hrs on
it (this was about 6 pages of 4 part) - mostly on measure widths, and
adjustments like that.
I discovered that Finale's transcriber is a bit like a Porsche - alot
of power, and hard to control. I've written a long letter to Coda on
this.
Although the sequencer in Finale is fairly good, it can't come close to
MTP (for example) - it's single track for one thing, and it's really
hard to punch in with any accuracy. It's sortof representative of
Finale in general: really great idea with a difficult User Interface.
This was in that long letter to Coda too.
Hmmmm, I guess to get "multi-track" you'd have to do one track, and
save the info as a transcription file (which you can do with Finale),
then do another "track" (and save it), and so on... then notate each
"track" ...... ugggghhhh. It was alot faster with MTP... I just said
Tracks become staves, and let it rip.
I guess it's more important to capture the sequences than it is to see
the score, hence the relatively quiet times with notation software
I've seen in the past 6-9 months (although the Coda newsletter keeps
talking of pieces that CBS or somebody did with Finale). I'd sortof
like to try notating something for somebody to see what Finale does
with "real" music (something longer than 6 pages) -- are there any MIDI
data files in public domain??? or does someone want to send me one as
an experiment??
Although I've still got some more learning to do with Finale, it's a
pretty good notation package (that's actually an understatement), and
I've switched to it completely. After reading about Karl's "Psychology
of Recording", I'd keep MTP around for inspirations, and Finale for the
documentation (!!)
Oh yeah -- I tried Tablature staves, and came away with alot of
suggestions for Coda... I mean, they work, but it's amazingly clumsy to
construct. And they are a little limited. On the "good" side, I (for
the first time) actually made a stave of 4, 5, and 6 lines (mandolin,
guitar, and something magic with 5 strings... :-) that worked as far
as notation goes.
Ah well... onwards!
|
1617.19 | Finale MIDI connection and OS/2 | 17265::KOEHN | | Thu Dec 13 1990 17:55 | 9 |
| As a hope-to-be new user of Finale, some information about the
Hardware/Software interface is requested.
With a DECstation 316SX, 8MB, running OS/2, what MIDI interface will
work? Whice MIDI is a good choice? Does Finale provide drivers for
MIDIs like the Roland MPU IPC? Or does the driver come with the
hardware? Will Finale run under OS/2 or must MS-DOS be used?
This is not a complete list of questions but you get the idea.
|
1617.20 | some ideas | HOTWTR::EVANS_BR | | Fri Dec 14 1990 19:14 | 10 |
| re: which MIDI -- Sounds like you might want to call either Finale
CODA: (612) 854-1288
or Computers & Music (a store in San Francisco, CA) (415) 994-2909
I'd try Comp&Music first -- they were pretty darn helpful when I went
to buy Finale for the MAC. I do not have any drivers since Finale lets
you send down MIDI values at different times (HEX) - it's up to you to
figure out what needs sending, and then decode/encode it into a hex
value(s) tied with a visual representation (eg: "Flute" in the notation
sends a patch change)
|
1617.21 | Finale and DECwrite | MAIL::KOEHN | | Mon Jun 03 1991 16:51 | 6 |
| After six months of Finale, I can report that it is better than
chocolate. One interesting feature is that it allows output in
encapsulted PostScript. Then you can incorporate scores into DECwrite.
How about that!?
Bruce
|
1617.22 | | TALOFA::HARMON | Paul Harmon, DECtp/East | Mon Sep 09 1991 17:53 | 10 |
| Does anybody have any experience using Finale with word processing
and/or destop publishing packages that run on a Mac? I'd like to be
able to generate notation with Finale and somehow incorporate that into
a document. If Finale can generate encapsulated PostScript, can that
be imported by something like Publish-It Easy?
I'm a new Mac user trying to figure out what software it makes sense
to buy...
Paul
|
1617.23 | You didn't ask, but... | EZ2GET::STEWART | Balanced on the biggest wave | Mon Sep 09 1991 18:02 | 6 |
|
Copyist DTP-Pro will write EPS or TIFF format files.
|
1617.24 | | MAJTOM::ROBERT | | Tue Sep 10 1991 20:15 | 7 |
|
Finale generates EPS files (maybe other formats too, can't remember)
Should be no problem pulling it into any mainstream pub software.
I think we've pulled it into PageMaker and maybe Word too. We've actually
have pulled into PC apps and converted to DDIF as well.
-Tom
|
1617.25 | New England user group seeks members | STRAD::MATTHEWS | | Mon Jan 06 1992 23:06 | 11 |
| If you got the Fall '91 issue of Coda Notes, you may have noticed that
a Finale user group is forming in New England.
Today I spoke with the contact person, Joe Heary. He is collecting
names and addresses of interested people, hopes to get enough momentum
going for regular meetings, and would definitely like to hear from some
more people.
You can reach him at (603)431-6539.
Val
|
1617.26 | Finale refresh vs Pagemaker | HOTWTR::EVANS_BR | | Mon Jan 13 1992 17:02 | 14 |
| FWIW:
I just finished a 4 measure tune on Finale using a MAC-II having 17
verses. Now while Finale did the job of lining up the words and notes,
the redraw time was long (appx 15 sec) and occurred each time any
change was effected.
Interestingly enough, a friend suggested using Pagemaker, with
guides under each note and use left oriented tabs to align the words in
each verse with the notes, and only have the notes done in Finale,
while all words are done in Pagemaker.
I'm probably going to go that way....Pagemaker refresh is *lots*
faster than Finale...
Bruce
|
1617.27 | Using Finale on Powerbook | TKOV50::F_KONDO | | Fri Jan 24 1992 02:11 | 41 |
| Hello, my name is Fumito Kondo. I've bought Coda's Finale 2.6.1 in last
spring. I've using Finale on Macintosh SE, system 6.0.7.1, finder 6.1.7.,
and music resource is ROLAND MT32. It was no problem.
I've satisfied to use this system.
Recentry, I bought new Macintosh Powerbook100, 170. I've tried to use
Finale on both of new machine Powerbook100, and 170.
Score editing has no problem. However, I can't play back on these new
machine using of Finale.
When I choose Play back tool, and click on measure, Finale will play music,
but MT32 has error occurs with message "MIDI buffer over flow".
Finale can't play music correctly. Music was almost no sound, sometime few
sound has occurs, but it was incorrect sound from score.
I've studied for reference manual. There is a description about V1 timing
for verious macintosh in the article MIDI setup.
machine V1 timing
Macintosh SE 2/200.
Macintosh SE30 2/250.
Macintosh II 2/248.
Macintosh IIx 2/230.
Macintosh IIcx 2/240.
There is no description for new Macintosh Powerbook, because of there are
new products.
I've changed V1 timing to verious value, then tried to play back.
However, I can't play music correctly.
I'd like to ask some questions bellow.
1. Is this problem realy related to V1 timing? Is there another cause in
this problem?
2. What is correct V1 value for Macintosh Powerbook100,170?
Does anyone has same experiences?
I'd like to appreciate your help.
Thank you very much in advance.
Best regards,
Fumito Kondo
|
1617.28 | Call Coda?? | HOTWTR::EVANS_BR | | Fri Jan 24 1992 13:13 | 12 |
| Fumito --
As a registered owner of Finale, you should be able to contact Coda
at (612) 854-9649 (Tech Support), and ask. I just tried to call, and
got a busy signal, but will continue to try since I'd like to know the
answer too. Whoever finds out first, post it here! :-)
Do the Powerbooks require MIDI Manager from Apple to interface
correctly??? On my MAC-II I took this out since Finale (2.6.0) burped
on it. Things have changed since then though!!
regards -- Bruce Evans
|
1617.29 | | DECWIN::FISHER | I *hate* questionnaires--Worf | Mon Jan 27 1992 12:16 | 4 |
| Of course, Fumito is in Tokyo, which makes it harder (or at least more expensive)
to call.
Burns
|