Chinese Musical Notation Software

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Chinese Musical Notation (Numbered System) Musical Notes. Numbers 1 to 7 represent the seven scale degrees in a diatonic major scale. For example, in C major, the. Aug 3, 2015 - the Numbered musical notation is widely used in China. To arrive who combines knowledge about Jianpu and software development skills.

How about that? I was interested in this studying chinese opera lately and numerical notation. I'm sure you could write a chinese opera for the chinese orch. In western notation, but i'm just interested.

I heard that someone figured out how to do it on sibelius. Or maybe you have it on there now for all i know. Oh yeah, and you'd have to have chinese characters.

Man, that would be pretty cool. But again, maybe you've got that too. I had a question too. Uh.how would rewire integrate with a fantom g or motif? However,i don't like the piano and strings sounds on them, and if i get one, i want to use the better piano sounds you have.

Or that i have on garritan to record Into the motif,fantom, whatever i get if i do. Posted by - 09 Feb 03:18AM. I cannot comment on the Chinese opera notation, but about the Fantom G or Motif, I don't think you can use Rewire to integrate a hardware device like these two synths with Sibelius. By contrast, you might be able to use them as playback midi devices with the appropriate Sibelius soundsets. If you don't like their sounds however, you are well advised to buy a midi keyboard w/o built in sounds and instead buy a virtual (software) library which you do like. The Fantom G is pretty expensive, you are paying for the hardware and built in sounds (which you may not like, though a lot of live keyboard players love them). -- Peter Roos Posted by - 09 Feb 04:15AM.

There was a discussion of numeric notation a while ago; it would be difficult to write csomething to do such a concersion. Here is a link to a score on sibeliusmusic that shows a score done in Sibelius using this notations: I found the link on wikipedia, which says 'The composer He Yiping produced numbered musical notation in Sibelius even though Sibelius does not support it by design; presumably he did this by extensive use of manual symbol-positioning overrides.' I couldn't say. -- Bob Sib 1.4 - 6.1, Windows 7 Pro 64 bit, 2.13 GHz Core 2 Duo; Audiophile 2496; 4 G RAM. I am an experienced Sibelius user, but am not affiliated with Sibelius Software. Sib Plugin downloads: Plugin install instructions: Posted by - 09 Feb 05:12PM. > yeah, something with 88 keys on it.

And very well built too since i tend to pound on them. Any suggestions with the keyboard and the library? I tried motu symphonic before and it was a bad experience so i should be careful this time. Best is probably to try a couple of them - the M Audio has several with 88 keys and (semi) weighted and plenty of midi control buttons.

Look and feel are personal so best is probably to try a couple of them yourself. Also make sure its fits in your workspace - 88 keys is pretty big and doesn't fit in every studio. About virtual libraries, there are plenty that sound great. I am a big fan of Eastwest and they have a free download of a sample of their symphonic orchestra, that you might want to check out.

Their Pianos sound glorious, and many of their products are on sale. Vienna Symphonic Library is excellent as well, and Native Instruments is famous for its synthesizers. Really depends on your budget and what you want to achieve. -- Peter Roos Posted by - 10 Feb 01:23AM (edited 10 Feb 01:29AM).

Is east west composers collection discontinued? That looks good for me and sounds good. Have you used the symphonic choirs?

I was just telling my sister how i've wanted this for several years and there it is. I wonder what others have this. I hear vienna and east west are both hard and slow to install, and that i need 4gb to run choirs and that's probably the minumum requirment which is always insufficient.

Well, i'll figure it out. Please if you've used the symphonic choirs, tell me you're experiences with it, and also if you know for sure if composers collection has been discontinued.

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Thank you. Posted by - 10 Feb 04:07AM. No, the Complete Composers Collection is still on sale, and if you are in the US, you can fully customize it.

It is an excellent opportunity to get a full range of top notch libraries for a steeply discounted price. Yes, I do have symphonic choirs and they are magnificent - right now there is nothing quite like it. You can even make them sing syllables.

I should say that the setup of choirs and WB can be quite a puzzle which has driven quite a few people to high levels of frustration. In the end of the day it is all worth it though, at least in my opinion. Finally, indeed you will need a powerful computer to run Eastwest of VSL libraries. It all depends on how large your scores are, but 4 GB is probably a minimum for modest scores. For larger full fledged orchestral scores a minimum of 8 GB and upwards is recommended, as well as a 64 bit system (note that Sibelius though it is a 32 bit application runs smoothly in a 64 bit environment), a fast processor (at least quad core) and lots of hard disk space. On the last point, my EW libraries (and Native Instruments) take up close to 1 TB, spread out over several separate fast hard disks.