[micro] music transcription system: responses

unbent@ecsvax.UUCP (03/14/84)

==>
	Judging from the number of letters I received, my
request for pointers to a music transcription system or "word
processor for musical scores" (ecsvax.2086) hit a responsive
chord.  It turned out, however, that there were more requests
for reports on my findings than there were findings to report.
I did received the following:
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>From ecsvax!john      Full-Name: John Hogan
Location: N. C. Educational Computing Service

Alpha Syntauri has a system for the Apple that allows you to
compose music, save your compositions on diskette, and then
edit them interactively.  They make use of a sound generation
card for the Apple that is made by Mountain Computer.  One
year ago they began work on the graphics routines required to
print musical symbols on the screen and on paper, but I don't
know how far they got.
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>From ...!rlgvax!cvl!umcp-cs!eneevax!spam

	I have an Atari 800 with the Music Composer cartridge,
which allows me to enter music in four voices via the keyboard,
and play it at varying speeds.  It also "transposes", by moving
all the notes up or down by a fixed number of half-steps.
	As for printing, I am currently writing a UNIX* program
that accepts ASCII numbers in Music Composer format, and draws
music scores with the UNIX* graphics commands.  I intend to feed
this to a Versatec, and get beautiful music listings of original
compositions, but it should also work on any terminal that
accepts the commands....
	If you're interested in this software, I'll be glad to
give you more details, and a copy of it when I'm finished.

			--John ("Spam") Rehwinkel
			..!seismo!umcp-cs!eneevax!spam
			(301) 262-7893  (Bowie, MD)
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>From ...!mhuxl!mhuxj!mhuxi!charm!slag

     Electronic Arts has released a software product called
the music construction set.  This program runs on the
commodore 64.  It allows interactive graphical input of
music, Autoplay by the built in synthesizer on the 64, and
graphical output to one of the commodore dot matrix
printer.  It was reviewed in a recent creative computing.
I don't think there is a tool in the package to do
transcription....  I...haven't been able to find a store
carrying the program.  I have seen it for the apple II also.
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>From ....allegra!alice!mike

	I don't know what your standards are,
but there is probably nothing that approaches what you want.
The best effort to date is probably the Mockingbird system
("a composer's amanuensis", john maxwell, severo ornstein,
Xerox corporation).  The paper on it was printed in a recent
issue of Byte.
Look for the Japanese to come up with something good soon,
but in the meantime, there is nothing that we can call
"available" that is more than a toy.
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COINCIDENTALLY, the Japanese appear to have come up with
something good.  In the April 3 edition of PC MAGAZINE, I
found the following, in a report on a National Association of
Music Merchants show:

	The software star of the week was...Yamaha's *Personal
Composer*, created by Jim Miller (see...PC, Vol. 2, No. 7).
To operate it requires an IBM PC with at least 256K RAM, one
[DSDD] disk drive, a Hercules graphics board, and an Epson
FX-80 printer.  *Personal Composer* uses a very high level
language...standard music notation.
	Scores of orchestral complexity can be entered from
either the PC's keyboard or a single MIDI [Musical Instrument
Digital Interface] equipped synth....  After the tasks of
composing and arranging are done, the complete score can be
printed out in extremely clean graphics....
	Yamaha would not specify an exact release date and
price...but industry observers believe it will run
"significantly under $1000", perhaps as low as $700.  It is
expected to be available in late spring.

That seems to be what I was looking for.  Hope that all who
wrote find this (longish) summary useful.  Thanks to everyone
for their help.

Yours for clearer concepts,       --Jay Rosenberg
				    Dept. of Philosophy
...mcnc!ecsvax!unbent		    Univ. of North Carolina
				    Chapel Hill, NC  27514