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Using Notation Software products with other (third party) products Find out from others, or share your experience, about integrating Notation Software products with sound libraries, audio processing software, and other hardware and software products.

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  #1  
Old 05-24-2005, 03:52 PM
Sherry Crann (sherry)
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Default Howdy, I know the subject h

Howdy,

I know the subject has come up occasionally, and I thought I'd pass along a deal I found.

Scan Music currently has their "Lite" version music scanning software for only $24. It's very bare bones, but if all you want to do is to get sheet music (in my case, very old parlor music or satb hymns) into a midi file, this may be helpful. The editor is somewhat limited, but it does do a nice job of transcribing the notation, and while you're editing within the program it will concurrently highlight the original scanned image so you know exactly where you're at in the score.

My biggest gripe is that it will automatically put barlines in at the end of a set of staff lines and there is no way to delete them. And when it does that, it will "fill in" the perceived missing beats with rests. Conversely, though, you can add barlines if it missed them. I don't find this too big of a problem, however, because I'm just importing the midi into Composer Pro to work on anyway, so I just go in and copy over the notes and then delete the excess measures that leaves behind. This version also does not add lyrics.

You can find it here http://www.neuratron.com/photoscore.htm Scroll down to the bottom of the page. You can download a demo (can't save anything) or purchase the program. They also have other higher tier products, but this struck me as useful for MidiNotate users. I find it to be so

ttfn,
Sherry
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  #2  
Old 05-24-2005, 04:44 PM
David Jacklin (dj)
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Default Hi, Sherry: Have you been t

Hi, Sherry:

Have you been to this site: www.halcyondaysmusic.com ?

Lots of old parlour stuff, scanned or manually entered from sheetmusic, up to about 1920.

As a matter of fact, it's a source for a lot of the songs in a "musical melodrama" that I'm creating from a 1903 play, called The Lure of the Lights or Why Women Sin.

I haven't got to the sinning part, yet.


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  #3  
Old 05-24-2005, 05:08 PM
Sherry Crann (sherry)
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Default Howdy David, Yes, been ther

Howdy David,

Yes, been there, downloaded that

I found a number of the songs for my current project (making a CD of some old sing-along faves for my aunts and uncles) there. However, there have been some tunes that I couldn't find there (or elsewhere), or couldn't find the "right" (as defined by my Aunt Ruth) arrangement, so she's sending me copies of all of Grandma's sheet music. I was not looking forward to entering all that by hand, given my "spare time" schedule, so when I found the scanning software for $24, it was a no-brainer for me

As for why women sin, just ask Eve - "it was that serpent you put here in the garden." Pass that buck right on down the line ;)

ttfn,
Sherry
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  #4  
Old 12-09-2005, 05:07 PM
Anonymous
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Default Hello, I have just purchased

Hello,
I have just purchased Midinotate Composer. I would like to scan some sheet music and have it saved as a midi file for imput into Midinotate. Please advise me about the best software and scanner to achieve good results. Thanks

Fiona
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  #5  
Old 12-09-2005, 06:40 PM
Mark Walsen (markwa)
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Default Hello Anonymous, Sherry has

Hello Anonymous,

Sherry has been happy with an inexpensive music scanner available at http://www.neuratron.com/photoscore.htm. A few days ago I tried it, but ran into an installation problem of some sort that prevented me from successfully using it.

Two high-end music scanners are available from Musitek and SharpEye. You can export MIDI from them, and read the MIDI in MidiNotate Composer; but MIDI only saves information about what notes are played in what staves, and doesn't save information about music symbols such as dynamic marks.

Musitek and SharpEye also export MusicXML, which is a standard file format that preserves additional music notation symbol information, such as dynamic marks. MidiNotate Composer is overdue in supporting MusicXML. Nevertheless, you might still be happy with using Composer and MIDI export from a music scanner app.

Music scanning technology isn't as automatic as one might hope. It takes a lot of hand holding. So, the fact that Composer doesn't import all of the extra music symbols, such as dynamic marks and accent marks read by a music scanner, isn't as much of a problem as it might sound. It might even be a blessing in disguise. I suspect that it's easier, quicker, and less stressful for a Composer user to quickly manually add accent and dynamic marks and such, on top of the imported notes from a music scanner, than it is for the user of another music notation problem to correct all of the music scanning mistakes. I'm not making up this story. I've heard several folk say that they just scan notes, and nothing else from music scores, when they're working with other music notation programs.

Cheer
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  #6  
Old 12-10-2005, 08:00 PM
Sherry Crann (sherry)
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Default Howdy folks, Mark is indeed

Howdy folks,

Mark is indeed correct that you can find the exact same deal that I found (I have v 3.1x, and this one is 4.0, though) at http://www.neuratron.com/photoscore.htm

Scroll to the bottom of the page, and then follow the "order now click _here_", where "_here_" is a text link. You can then proceed to purchase it (it is download only) for $24. They seem to run this special only intermittently (that I've seen, though I don't keep regular tabs on their page), and from what I saw when I was looking for a scanning program earlier this year, this is pretty cheap. Other programs run about $100, and this one normally sells for $49 according to the page.

It works well for what I want to do, which is to scan in sheet music that I can then save as a .mid file to open in Composer. This version only reads notes (not performance marks or chord charts) on the staves that you select, and it will (contrary to what their description says for my version anyway) read two voices per staff. It will either read a page from your scanner, or .bmp files, and will save the results (after you edit them) as .mid.

The interface for correcting reading mistakes is quite nice, and it allows you to correct things and listen to it before saving the "read" score as a .mid. While you are editing, the mouse cursor moves along the score that it has "read" while simultaneously showing a cursor moving along the scanned picture of the original, which makes corrections very easy to make. You don't have to go back and forth between the scanned picture of the score and the editable score that will be saved as the .mid file.

The users' guide is a bit sketchy, but does give you the information that you need to successfully scan, read (ie, let the software interpret the file into sheet music), and export a .mid file so that you can work with it in MidiNotate.

Photoscore MIDI Lite is just a simple scanning program with export to MIDI only, but at the current price of $24, it's a great app for MidiNotate users. I've thoroughly enjoyed using it.

ttfn,
Sherry




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