Finale 2012 and Unicode – in Plain English!

by Scott Yoho 8. February 2012 07:45



Used by permission from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

If you create music in languages other than English, you probably have a good understanding of what Finale 2012’s Unicode font support offers. If not, perhaps the word “Unicode” is Greek to you. What does it offer those of us who don’t work in languages rich in diacritics and other mysterious characters?

Unicode support means that you can access any character in your font. If you’re still wondering what characters these might be, and how to do it, this blog is for you.

Try the following in Finale 2012 OR the free trial version of Finale 2012:

  • Select the Text Tool and double-click anywhere in your score, as if you wanted to enter some text.
  • From the Text menu choose Font, then specify a font, perhaps Times New Roman. Windows users also need to click “OK.”
  • From the Text menu choose Inserts > Symbol. 

This produces a Symbol Selection box from which you can select a character (from your selected font) to insert into your score.

In Times New Roman, I see things like images that represent the various suits in a deck of cards, copyright, trademark, and other legal symbols, distant memories from math class, emoticons, pictures, shapes, and, well, stuff that’s Greek to me too. Note that any time you edit text in Finale you have access to these font characters through the text menu, so you can use these symbols in expressionsm, articulations, and anywhere else you wish.

Is this the only way to access these characters using Finale? Certainly not. Your computer's operating system provides alternative ways to view and access these characters, and you can also purchase language-specific keyboards that already have all the Greek (or other language) characters on them.

Are you accessing these characters? How? Share your experience by clicking on “Comments” below.
 

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General | Scott Yoho

Finale Blog: Travel the World with Garritan Sounds

by Scott Yoho 3. February 2012 09:43


Last month we launched our “Take Your Music Further with Garritan” music composition contest.

In it, we invite contestants to develop a provided musical theme to create a piece of music – using Garritan sounds – that invokes their dream travel destination. The grand prize is a $2,000 United Airlines gift card and $500 in spending money.

Where would you go? Thailand looks good to me today.

We’ve enjoyed hearing the first batch of entries in the contest, and you can check them out too. To do so, and learn more about the contest, visit the contest home.

We’ve received feedback that people would like to see the contest rules before they install the Facebook contest app, and we’ve made that change: Simply click on “Official Rules” on the contest page and the rules will appear.

Note the rules indicate that eligible music compositions will not exceed 90 seconds in length. Nevertheless we’ve received a handful of submissions that were just a little longer than 90 seconds. When this happens, contestants are asked to resubmit a shorter entry. I’d suggest checking your audio file, by playing it in iTunes or another application, to make sure it is 90 seconds or shorter before you send it in.

If I was eligible to enter the contest, I’d probably keep refining my piece and not submit it until much closer to the deadline at noon (ET) on Wednesday, March 15th. Are you a procrastinator too? Let us know how it’s going by clicking on “Comments” below.

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Composition Contests | Scott Yoho

See the Upcoming Finale iPad App in Action!

by Scott Yoho 24. January 2012 06:53


Last week we announced our upcoming Finale iPad music viewer and demonstrated the app at NAMM, the music industry tradeshow in Anaheim, California.

For those who were unable to join us, we shot some video at the MakeMusic booth. Here Justin Phillips, our Technical Product Manager, demonstrates a few Finale files on his iPad.

Justin also indicated he'd like to share additional video of the app as we add functionality and get closer to release: Sounds great to me!

Have questions about the upcoming app or anything else Finale-related? Please let me know by clicking on “Comments” below.

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General | Justin Phillips | Scott Yoho

“Take Your Music Further with Garritan” Contest Announced

by Scott Yoho 19. January 2012 04:52


This week instead of shivering in Minnesota, I’m enjoying the California sun at the annual NAMM Show, the music industry trade convention.

If you’re thinking that you’d like to be traveling somewhere yourself, I have good news: MakeMusic just announced the “Take Your Music Further with Garritan” composition contest.

Contestants are asked to develop a provided musical theme to create a piece of music – using Garritan sounds – that evokes their dream travel destination. The grand prize is a $2,000 United Airlines gift card and $500 in spending money. Two runner-up prizes of $700 United Airlines gift cards will also be awarded.

Whether you’re dreaming of palm trees, or of ice fishing contests in central Minnesota, this could be your chance. Check out complete details here and get your entry in before Wednesday, March 15, 2012.

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Composition Contests | General | Scott Yoho

Finale iPad Music Viewer Announced

by Scott Yoho 18. January 2012 06:48


Because MakeMusic is a public company, I can’t talk about products in development that have not yet been publically announced. Over the last several months I have received MANY requests for a means to share Finale-created music on the iPad. While I dutifully forward these suggestions to our development team, I’ve been unable to say “of course we’re working on it.”

Until today.

This morning MakeMusic announced an upcoming iPad music app that will enable iPad users to view, print, and play music created in Finale. Better yet, it’s on display this week (Jan 19-22, 2012) at the NAMM Show, the music industry trade show in Anaheim, California.

My goal is to bring some video back from NAMM of the new app in action and share it with you on this blog. If you’re planning to attend the show, you can beat me to the punch by seeing it for yourself at our booth # 6112 (Hall A).

Have observations or questions? Please share them with us by clicking on “Comments” below.

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General | Scott Yoho

Finale NotePad 2012 will be FREE

by Scott Yoho 17. January 2012 18:53


MakeMusic announced today the upcoming release of Finale NotePad 2012, which will be available for download on February 15, 2012.

Even bigger news is that Finale NotePad 2012 will be free.

NotePad is, of course, entry-level music notation software. To use my favorite A&W menu metaphor, if Finale is the Poppa Burger, NotePad is the Baby Burger. Or maybe the Teen Burger.

Finale NotePad 2012 will also include select features new to Finale 2012, including Unicode font support (providing access to all characters in any font and facilitating the creation of music in any language) and aspects of Finale’s new ScoreManager™, which simplifies the control of playback sounds.

While this is clearly great news for folks who want to create music notation who don’t currently own any software, it’s also great news for people, like me, who already own Finale. A free NotePad simplifies collaboration with nearly any computer owner: I simply remind my co-conspirators to download NotePad to view, play, and print Finale files I send them AND to make any necessary edits. My music educator friends can create assignments and tests with Finale that thier students can open and complete in NotePad.

I can also make great use of NotePad when I’m away from my computer (but near anyone else’s) and inspiration strikes.

How will you put a free NotePad to good use? Which A&W menu item offers the best metaphor? Please share your thoughts by clicking on “Comments” below.

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General | Scott Yoho

Celebrity Finale Users Unmasked

by Scott Yoho 17. January 2012 04:46


In my previous blog post I indicated that I’ll be interviewing some high-profile Finale users at the NAMM Show this week.

Today I can let you know who’s participating, and it’s a Who’s Who of busy Hollywood orchestrators:

Note that I’ve linked to their imdb.com pages above so you can check out some of the many projects they’ve been involved with. In our interviews we’ll learn how they started in the business, what their work encompasses, how Finale fits into the picture, and more.

If you’re attending NAMM, please join us: Our interviews will begin each day at 12:10 p.m. at the MakeMusic booth, # 6112 in Hall A. If not, I hope to share the highlights right here on the Finale Blog as well as on Facebook and Twitter.

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Finale User Spotlight | Scott Yoho

MakeMusic Presentations at NAMM Show

by Scott Yoho 11. January 2012 04:09


Are you attending this year's NAMM Show Jan 19-22? It’s the annual music industry trade show held in Anaheim, California. This is where music instrument and software manufacturers demonstrate their new products to the media, dealers, distributors, and the musicians of the world.

The MakeMusic booth (#6112 in Hall A) will host several in-booth presentations daily. Here’s a brief overview:

  • 11:10 a.m. Depth and Breadth of Garritan Libraries with Gary Garritan and Justin Phillips
  • 12:10 p.m. Meet Finale Users with Scott Yoho
  • 1:10 p.m. Why Choose Finale? with Justin Phillips
  • 2:10 p.m. Creating SmartMusic Accompaniments with Finale with Tom Johnson
  • 3:10 p.m. Meet MusicXML Creator Michael Good with Justin Phillips
  • 4:10 p.m. Top Ten Tips: Easiest and Fastest Ways to Use Finale with Tom Johnson
  • 5:10 p.m. Using Garritan Libraries in Finale with Justin Phillips [Thu-Sat ONLY]

I’m still in the process of finalizing the scheduling WHO we’ll meet in my “Meet Finale Users” section, but we’ll be pretty close to Hollywood, so you can expect some of our many friends from the film community to appear.

Not attending NAMM? Of course we’ll share late-breaking news as well as highlights from the show right here on the Finale Blog as well as on facebook and twitter.

Have questions or observations? Please let me know by clicking on “Comments” below!

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Finale User Spotlight | General | Scott Yoho

Finale Spotlight on Robert Paterson (Part 2)

by Scott Yoho 9. January 2012 04:17



Robert Paterson, photographed by Daniel Dottavio

In our last post we met NYC-based composer Robert Paterson. Today we conclude our interview, see an example of his excellent Finale work, and learn more about his most recent recording, The Book of Goddesses, which earned him a Composer of the Year Award from the Classical Recording Foundation.

SY: Could you describe your music, or your musical goals?

RP: I think of my music as contemporary classical concert music, for lack of a better phrase, so I focus on writing music for people to sit in concert halls and enjoy. I would describe my music as oftentimes energetic and colorful; I focus a lot on timbre and color.

I am also obsessed with form, so I try to create pieces that feel like, as you get to the end of the piece, there is never a dull moment where you lose focus. If people say to me, “Oh, there was never a moment where I dozed off,” then I’m happy. [laughter]

SY: That seems more honest that most composers might be willing to be in an interview; most would feel compelled to claim that they’re out to change people’s lives or something grander.

RP: You know, there are some pieces you listen to where there are whole swaths where you kind of float in and out. As much as possible, I try to engage listeners’ interest for the entire duration. Obviously, as you write longer pieces, this becomes more difficult.

I also really enjoy writing pieces that performers like to play. I am not the kind of composer who thinks of performers as automatons or technicians – I like to think of them as my colleagues and that the whole creative experience is a team effort. I like to think of composing as something you do with performers and not against them, not as a solitary effort.

I think that music is a very communal experience in the best possible way. If you go to a really good performance and the performers are happy and enjoying themselves, and they’re getting into the music and nothing is holding them back (whether it’s the notation or how they feel about the music itself), it makes the audience enjoy the performance so much more. And they’ll want to experience it again. My goal in life is to make people fall in love with that experience.

SY: Let’s talk about the music on your new CD, The Book of Goddesses.

RP: I am really proud of this album. It was three years in the making, so it was definitely a labor of love. It contains three chamber pieces. The first, The Book of Goddesses, is in nine-movements and was written for MAYA, an amazing trio based in New York City. It is scored for flute, harp, and percussion, and the percussion part is primarily hand drums. Writing for hand drums was a little out of the ordinary for me, as I usually write for classical percussion instruments, but it was a lot of fun. The whole work is meant to be choreographed. Each movement highlights a different goddess from a different region of the world, and the music reflects this. [View an excerpt.]

The second piece, Freya’s Tears, was written for Clockwise, a violin and harp duo in New York and is related to The Book of Goddesses. It’s like a sister piece, for violin and harp.

The third piece, Embracing the Wind, is scored for flute, viola and harp. This piece has been played quite a bit, as I wrote it quite a while ago. On this recording it’s performed by the American Modern Ensemble [of which Robert is the founder and Artistic Director].

SY: You mentioned the communal experience, of the composer and the performers, in the creation of music. One performer on the CD links all three ensembles heard on the disc.

RP:  The line that runs through all three is harpist Jacqueline Kerrod, who is in the American Modern Ensemble, Clockwise, and is a former member of MAYA.

SY: Any last thoughts?

RP: Perhaps an unsolicited plug. I feel strongly that Finale is the best software program out there for making your music look as beautiful as you want it to look.

I’d like to congratulate Robert for winning the Composer of the Year Award from the Classical Recording Foundation and for sharing his thoughts with us.

What are you creating in Finale? Let us know by clicking on “Comments” below.

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Finale User Spotlight | Scott Yoho

Finale Spotlight: Removing Barriers with Robert Paterson

by Scott Yoho 4. January 2012 11:15



Robert Paterson, photographed by Daniel Dottavio

This week we meet composer Robert Paterson. Based in New York City, Robert is currently the Music Alive composer-in-residence with the Vermont Youth Orchestra Association. His latest release, The Book of Goddesses, garnered him a Composer of the Year Award from the Classical Recording Foundation. Learn more about his many awards, commissions, and performances at robpaterson.com (and note that he’s not the Finale plug-in creator and composer Robert G. Patterson).

Scott Yoho: What was your introduction to composition?

Robert Paterson: When I was a kid, my parents used to take me to new music and other classical concerts. My dad was a sculptor and taught at the State University of New York at Buffalo. So I grew up seeing people like John Cage, Morton Feldman, Lejaren Hiller and all kinds of other musicians all the time. I was used to that, and thought this was normal, and that all kids did this.

In my early teens I began studying composition with Puerto Rican composer William Ortiz, and he was influential, but my high school teachers were also really supportive of my composing habit. I definitely have a lot of gratitude for them now as a professional composer, and I think about my background quite a bit as resident composer with the Vermont Youth Orchestra. I’ve visited many schools and I always talk to teachers about how important it is to support students who want to compose, even if it seems a little out there for them.

SY: What was your introduction to music notation software?

RP: I am one of those people who have been using Finale from the very beginning, from version 1.0: I transitioned over from something called Professional Composer…

SY: I used Composer too – you could have any beam angle you’d like, as long as it was perfectly horizontal! [Laughter followed by tales of horrible ink jet printers and tearing of tractor-feed paper…]

RP:  Once Finale came around you could tell it was going to be a different ball game, and I’ve been using it ever since. While at Sarah Lawrence College I taught a course in notation with Finale and Sibelius side by side. We would often do experiments with the students; creating a page in Sibelius, and then trying to do the same thing in Finale, and comparing the results.

This emphasized even more for me how much I really enjoyed working with Finale and didn’t really enjoy Sibelius. I always felt like Sibelius threw up a lot of roadblocks: Almost like somebody was slapping your wrists when you tried to do something out of the ordinary. Whereas in Finale, if you come up with a crazy idea or something that’s a little out of the ordinary that’s just not common, it’s easy to do.

I think that Finale is a much more open-ended program that allows composers to be more creative.

SY: Can you describe your work process?

RP: I began writing music before there was notation software. All along my process has been to sketch by hand with pencil and paper, then move to the computer to notate. A lot of composers nowadays don’t do that at all. While I want to transition over someday [to composing directly on the computer], I am waiting for a large-format touch screen that’s easy to use with a MIDI keyboard, because I don’t want to have a computer keyboard in front of me.  I’d rather use a stylus or my fingers. I don’t want to have too many interfaces between me and the music, but that’s just the way I think about it and everybody’s different.

SY: When we spoke before, you said that because Finale can, for example, let you make feathered beams look exactly the way you’d like them to, you might be tempted to do that as you compose, whereas if you simply sketch it, you just capture the idea and move on.

RP: For me, what is most important is that the ideas flow as I invent them without having to worry about how I am going to notate them. Knowing that Finale will be able to notate anything I write means I never worry about whether it is possible. I like to focus on the composition first, then concentrate on the notation later.

SY: What are your goals when notating music?

RP: I don’t want the performers to think about how the music is notated. In fact, the less they think about that, the more I feel like I’ve done my job. I want the notation to be so clear that there is nothing about it that distracts them from making music. I think a lot about how to make everything look clean and precise and as conventional as possible.

On the issue of transparency, I think of film composers. The great ones write music that is so integral to what’s on the screen that you forget the music’s even there. The music reinforces your emotional response rather than interrupts it.

SY: I think we have a theme here. Your preference for Finale, your pencil-first workflow, and your notation approach are all driven by your desire to not place any barriers between people and music.

RP: Exactly. My philosophy is to remove any unnecessary obstacles.

In our next post we’ll conclude our interview with Robert, see an example of his excellent Finale work, and learn more about his music and his award-winning CD, The Book of Goddesses.

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Finale User Spotlight | Scott Yoho

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