![]() Then, to change the start and end positions, I just did Shift+Right or Shift+Left. I just had to press “S” or “+”, respectively, and it would automatically form a slur. Slurring and ties were also easy to accomplish in MuseScore. ![]() MuseScore will even fill in rests for me so that I didn’t have to! I especially appreciated the many ways that I could enter and edit notes, whether it be with mouse input, keyboard input, MIDI input, or a combination of the three. Inputting chords was also easy just press Shift + (A, B, C, D, E, F, G) and it will build a chord. Or, you can type in notes with the keyboard (A-B-C-D-E-F-G) and move them with the Up or Down arrow. ![]() Just select a note value in note input mode and move the mouse to where you want the note to be. I knew this was an app that I would actually keep and use.Įntering notes in MuseScore is a piece of cake, and there are so many ways to do it. There were only a few toolbars for note input, playback, and editing, but that’s all I really needed. At first glance, it was much simpler than other similar programs I had tried previously. It’s quite a big program though, but 100 megabytes later, I finally got to open the application for the first time. I got the MuseScore application through a newsletter from Mac OS X freeware. I’ve been looking for a music notation program forever that’s free, powerful, and isn’t a demo, and I finally found it.
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