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  2. MuseScore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MuseScore

    MuseScore 2 MuseScore 2.0 2.0.0 March 2015 [42] A large number of new features were introduced, including full support for tablature and guitar chord diagrams, linked part/score editing, an image capture capability, two new SMuFL-compliant music fonts, and MusicXML 3.0 support. MuseScore 2.0 running on Windows 11. MuseScore 2.0 running on ...

  3. Muse Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muse_Group

    Muse Group (MuseCY Holdings Ltd. [2]) is a software and education company specialised in making tools and resources for music composition, music production and music education. Established in 1998 as Ultimate Guitar , it became Muse Group in 2021 following several acquisitions such as MuseScore and Audacity .

  4. Comparison of scorewriters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_scorewriters

    Guitar tablature WYSIWYG editor MIDI entry [a] Playback File formats Developer(s) Stable release; review date License ... MIDI, SoundFonts, SFZ, VST3: MuseScore, ...

  5. Digital Sound Factory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_Sound_Factory

    Digital Sound Factory is a sound design company that creates sound libraries, known as SoundFont libraries, for playback on synthesizers and computers compatible with Steinberg Cubase, Cakewalk Sonar, Reasonstudios, Steinberg Halion, Native Instruments Kontakt, Apple GarageBand, Apple Logic, Ableton Live, GenieSoft Overture, Finale, Creative Labs Audigy/X-Fi, E-MU Systems EmulatorX/Proteus X ...

  6. SoundFont - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SoundFont

    SoundFont 2.04 was introduced in 2005 with the Sound Blaster X-Fi. The 2.04 format added support for 24-bit samples. The 2.04 format is bidirectionally compatible with the 2.01 format, so synthesizers that are only capable of rendering 2.0 or 2.01 format would automatically render instruments using 24-bit samples at 16-bit precision.

  7. List of music software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_music_software

    NI Massive, Kontakt (software), B4, Electrik Piano, Guitar Rig 2 (Native Instruments) OrangeVocoder ; SoundFont (Integrates synthesized/sampled MIDI files with recorded music) MachFive, Symphonic Instrument (Mark of the Unicorn)

  8. MIDI - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIDI

    [3]: 4 A MIDI recording of a performance on a keyboard could sound like a piano or other keyboard instrument; however, since MIDI records the messages and information about their notes and not the specific sounds, this recording could be changed to many other sounds, ranging from synthesized or sampled guitar or flute to full orchestra.

  9. General MIDI - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_MIDI

    Other most notable features were 9 Drum kits with 14 additional drum sounds each, simultaneous Percussion Kits – up to 2 (Channels 10/11), Control Change messages for controlling the send level of sound effect blocks (cc#91-94), entering additional parameters (cc#98-101), portamento, sostenuto, soft pedal (cc#65-67), and model-specific SysEx ...