Scanning Music – Easier Than You Think!
Note:
All prices subject to change. We will beat almost any price, plus we provide
free technical support!
What Does It Do?
Just as you can scan and edit text, it is
now possible to scan and edit music!
This is accomplished by using a specialized
program that recognizes the notes and converts them into music. As with humans,
the software does make mistakes, although the accuracy is between 90-95% for
most of the programs available. Once the music has been recognized, it is either
saved as a MIDI file for use in another notation program, or imported
directly into a host notation program. MIDI files
only contain note information, so things like dynamics, lyrics and other markings
don’t get transferred when you save as a MIDI file.
To avoid losing this valuable information,
some scanning programs are integrated with a notation program. This allows
you to immediately transfer your scanned music into a program for further editing
without losing any information.
What Can It Do For Me?
Music Educators:
- Problems with your instrumentation? Transpose
the bassoon part for the tenor sax quickly and easily!
- Missing parts for your ensemble? Simply
scan in the score and extract the part you need!
- Need an easier key? Scan and transpose!
- Wish you could afford a full-time accompanist?
Scan your music in and save as MIDI file
– you can then play the music at any tempo, in any key while stopping and
starting wherever you like. You can even mute or solo parts for teaching!
Arrangers:
- Stop wasting time re-entering music!
Just scan the music in and start arranging right away!
Church musicians:
- Too high or too low? Scan and transpose
– then print out the new parts for your choir.
- Need a hymn for Alto Sax, Clarinet, Tuba
and Piccolo (or anything else for that matter!) – by tomorrow? Scan, arrange
and transpose - in just a few minutes you’ll have the parts that you need!
- Can’t find an accompanist all of the time?
Scan your music in and save as MIDI file
– you can then play the music at any tempo, in any key while stopping and
starting wherever you like. You can even mute or solo parts for teaching!
Home users:
- Trouble learning new music? Scan it in
a listen to the computer play it for you. Slow it down and then speed it
up as you watch the notes go by or as you play along!
Instrumentalists & Vocalists
- Music out of your range? Scan and transpose
– in just a few minutes you can have music in your range!
- Wrong key? Want to play a string quartet
in your brass quintet? Transposing becomes as easy as scanning the music
in, choosing the key and printing out the parts that you need!
What Do I Need?
None of the programs below require expensive
scanners. Almost any flatbed scanner will work - just remember to scan using the settings
provided in the instructions with the software! If you don’t have a scanner,
you can purchase them for less than $100.
I have not included Print Music or Allegro in the list of software below.
Although both programs offer scanning capabilities, my experience with them so
far has been that they are less than adequate in this area. Aside from poor
accuracy, the music does not retain it's original layout, nor is there an
on-screen representation of the original to compare against. This makes it
extremely difficult to find errors and correct. (Believe me, this can be very
frustrating!) These programs do not allow you to scan directly into the
program. Instead you need to import a file you have already scanned. For more
information on these three programs, please contact us or visit our website.
MidiScan has been removed from this FAQ, as it has been replaced by SmartScore.
Information on scanning with
Finale 2003
has been listed at the end of this FAQ.
Photoscore Lite (Hybrid - both Mac and PC)
Free with Sibelius – http://kellysmusicandcomputers.com/sibelius.asp
PhotoScore is a free plug-in that comes with
Sibelius. Sibelius is a smart, powerful, and fast score-writer that is also
very easy to use. Photoscore integrates very nicely with Sibelius. After you
scan the music in, you have the option of editing any mistakes that the program
may have made in scanning, but it is surprisingly accurate! Once you have fixed
any problems, the click of a button will transfer the music into Sibelius for
further editing.
One of the outstanding features of Photoscore
is that it will automatically detect if it missed any notes by adding up each
measure. If there are missing notes, it will actually display a small red note
to the right of the bar, indiciating the value of the missing note(s). For
example, if a quarter note is missing from the bar, a small red quarter note
will indicate this for you. This is a real time saver, since correcting rhythmic
errors is the hard part. Correcting pitch errors is simple - just play the
file back and listen for mistakes!
Another great feature in Photoscore is the
interface - it is virtually identical to Sibelius, making it very easy to use.
Photoscore is quite fast and the fact that
you can edit your music in Sibelius makes arranging and transposing really easy!
Although the “Light” version that comes with Sibelius only scan notes, the full
version of PhotoScore scans text, dynamics, articulations, etc. Note that Photoscore
Lite will not scan music with multiple voices (i.e. Soprano and Alto on the
same staff.)
Photoscore Full Version (Hybrid - both Mac
and PC)
Add-on to Sibelius -
http://kellysmusicandcomputers.com/savemoney.asp?c=AP-1584
This is an upgrade to the PhotoScore Lite
that comes free with Sibelius (see above for information on PhotoScore Lite.)
The full version is faster, more accurate
and has more features, including the ability to read:
- Notes & chords (including stem direction,
beams & flags), rests
- Accidentals, articulation marks
- Clefs, key signatures, time signatures
- 5-line staves (normal and small), barlines
- Page format, including the page size,
staff size, margins, and where systems end
- Slurs, ties and hairpins
- Text including lyrics, dynamics, instrument
names, tempo and technique markings
Photoscore does a very good job of picking
up multiple voices and articulations. Text scanning has been dramatically improved
in version 2.0. Other new features include the ability to recognize fingering
and chord symbols and the addition of advanced tuplet deduction. Photoscore
2 will even try to distinguish between bold and italic text.
Overall, I found the full version to be more
accurate in recognizing notes that the lite version. The results ranged from
unbelievably good to surprisingly poor, depending on the score. Some brass
quintets I scanned were perfect – every note, rhythm and articulation was identified.
The original score was clean and well spaced. I was equally surprised with
some solo trumpet literature from a Franco Colombo publication in 1953. The
music was very crowded and the note heads were quite thick – not pleasant to
read at all. However, PhotoScore did a fine job reading it and only made two
or three errors on the entire page, apart from the text errors.
PhotoScore also surprised me with its ability
to pick up complex meters, frequent time changes and an abundance of articulations.
However, it occasionally lapsed and missed the first two or three bars of the
last system on the page. Rescanning sometimes helped, although in most cases
rereading the music was more useful.
There were a couple of scores that were horribly
inaccurate, with many missing notes and missing accidentals. These were generally
scores with small staves, so scanning the music at 120% may have helped.
The new version of PhotoScore seems to be
more consistent. In previous versions, it was difficult to predict which scores
would work and which ones wouldn't. I still have a difficult time predicting
what music will work well and what won't, but you can be sure that hand-written
scores or jazz fonts won't turn out very well.
All in all, PhotoScore does a fine job of
scanning music. You can’t depend on it to work for every score, however, and
there will still be cases where you are better off entering the music yourself
with the keyboard!
SmartScore (Hybrid - both Mac and PC)
SmartScore Professional - http://kellysmusic.biz/savemoney.asp?c=1714
SmartScore SongBook - http://kellysmusic.biz/savemoney.asp?c=4049
SmartScore Piano - http://kellysmusic.biz/savemoney.asp?c=1715
SmartScore Guitar - http://kellysmusic.biz/savemoney.asp?c=4050
SmartScore MIDI - http://kellysmusic.biz/savemoney.asp?c=4051
Smartscore 2.0 offers a dramatic improvement
in scanning over earlier versions. It also offers a host of new features, along
with a number of new "editions." Each Smartscore Edition uses the
same scanning engine, but vary in the number of staves that can be scanned and
the type of editing that can be done. (See chart below).
New features in SmartScore 2.0 include supports
for text and lyrics. Although it can't scan guitar fret boards, you can add
them along with chord symbols from a library of over 100 chords. There are
also a number of new MIDI editing tools and features.
All versions can save the music you scan
as a MIDI file, to be imported into any sequencing or notation
program. Doing this, however, means that you lose any non-note
information such as dynamic markings or articulations. It also means that your
notation program must "interpret" the MIDI data
and display it as notation. This means that what may have been a staccato quarter
note when you scanned it might become a dotted eighth sixteenth rest combination.
Apart from the MIDI Edition, all SmartScore
editions allow you to import your file into Finale. Most of your articulations,
dynamics, etc. are retained for editing in Finale. I found this much easier
than editing the file in SmartMusic.
One of the unique features of SmartScore
is the way that it separates the way the music sounds from the way it looks.
In effect, Smartscore becomes both a notation program and a MIDI sequencer.
The MIDI capabilities of the Pro and Songbook Edition are
quite extensive. For example, to change velocity and tempo, you can use your
mouse draw a graph above the staff indicating the shape of the dynamics, or
change in tempo.
Smartscore also allows you to assign individual
voices to different MIDI channels,
making it a great tool for practicing choral music. You can mute individual
voices, or assign different instruments, making "music minus one"
fast and easy.
Although not
as easy to use as other notation programs such as Sibelius, Smartscore features
an extensive list of notation editing features in addition to the MIDI editing.
Print preview seems to be missing, and you can end up putting too many beats
in a bar if you aren't careful.
With improvements
in accuracy and new features such as text and lyric scanning, SmartScore Version
2.0 has made scanning music a suitable option for anyone who needs to edit,
arrange or simply playback music. Although we wouldn't apply the words "easy
to use", the manual and tutorial are well written. Hopefully future versions
will address usability concerns. It also still has problems with "missing"
barlines, requiring you to manually add in the ones that are missing, but other
than these minor concerns, it is a very good program.
See chart below
to compare the various editions of SmartScore and determine which is right for
your needs.
|
|
Smartscore
Pro |
Songbook
Edition |
Piano
Edition |
Guitar
Edition |
MIDI
Edition |
|
ENF Editing |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Number of Staves
Recognized |
32 Staves max. |
3 Staves max. |
2 Staves max. |
1 Staff max. |
4 Staves max. |
Text & Lyric
Recognition / Editing |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
No |
No |
Score
Structure |
32 Parts |
Limit to
3 Parts |
No |
No |
No |
|
Bracketing |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
No |
Guitar and
Chord Symbols |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
Yes |
No |
MIDI Editing /
Step Rec. / Virtual Drums |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
No |
Yes |
|
MIDI Recording |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
No |
Yes |
|
Hidden Symbols |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
MIDI to ENF |
32 Parts |
3 Parts
max. |
2 Parts
max. |
1 Part
max. |
No |
Instrument Templates
/
Master System |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
ENF Printing |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
|
ENF Transposition |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
|
File Export |
ENF / NIFF
MIDI / FIN |
ENF / NIFF
MIDI / FIN |
ENF / NIFF MIDI / FIN |
ENF / NIFF MIDI / FIN |
ENF / MIDI |
Smartscore Lite - (Hybrid - both Mac and PC)
Free with Finale –
http://kellysmusicandcomputers.com/savemoney.asp?c=1249
Finale 2003 includes SmartScore Lite. The Lite edition seems to have the same
high level of accuracy that is included with Smartscore Pro, but it's usability
is limited in a number of ways. For example, you need to scan the music
yourself, saving it as an image file before using Smartscore. This means you
will need to set the appropriate resolution and correct any page skew or other
problems before running it through Smartscore.
More significant usability issues include the inability to show both the
original and the notes in Finale on the same screen for editing purposes. It is
much easier to spot and correct mistakes when you can look at both on the same
screen. The fact that Smartscore Lite seems to retain the same number of bars
per system means that you can overcome this drawback by keeping the original in
hand.
Another major disapointment in the lite version is the lack of any sort of error
correction. Neither Smartscore Lite or Finale will let you know when there are
obvious ryhthmic mistakes. Photoscore handles this by immediately indicating any
incomplete measures, and the full version of Smartscore includes an error
checking mode. In fact, with Smartscore Lite some music we scanned was missing
entire measures, and we hear no warning or complain from Finale! Although it has
an option to recognize triplets, most music we scanned with triplets ended up
having extra beats in those bars - again with no warning from Finale or
Smatscore.
Other features missing in the "Lite" version include:
- does not recognize lyrics and text
- does not pick up any dynamics and articulations
- does not include a scanning interface
- no error correction, editing or preview before sending to Finale
However, Smartscore Lite is still quite accurate, and given that it is
inlcuded free with Finale 2003, it will be beneficial to anyone who doesn't need
to scan music very often. If you frequently scan, or don't want the hassle of
guessing where mistakes might be and then adding all of the missing
articulations, dynamics and lyrics, you might want to get one of the full
versions of Smartscore to use with Finale. If you don't think you will be
scanning a lot of music, and would welcome any relief from tedious mouse or step
entry, then Smartscore Lite is surprisingly accurate and the price is right!
MP Scan (PC Only)
Demo http://KellysMusicAndComputers.com/savemoney.asp?c=1481
Scan music into Music Publisher 32 (requires Music Publisher 32 to work). Music
Publisher 32 is a “graphical” music editing program, which only concerns itself
with how your music looks, rather than how the music will sound. This makes it
very easy for the MPScan to re-create your original score in the Music Publisher
32 program for further editing. Note that Music Publisher does not contain any
MIDI features such as playback or recording. It doesn’t bother with enforcing
any musical rules, so you can create scores exactly how you want them to look!
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