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MusiXTeX is a suite of open source music engraving macros and fonts that allow music typesetting in TeX, released under the GPL-2.0-or-later license. [1] History
[12] [13] Version 3.1 was released in December 2017 with improved support for the Standard Music Font Layout . [14] Version 4.0 was released in June 2021 and resolved multiple issues. [15] The MusicXML DTDs and XSDs are each freely redistributable under the W3C Community Final Specification Agreement. [5]
Fonts that support it include Bravura, Euterpe, FreeSerif, Musica and Symbola. The Standard Music Font Layout ( SMuFL ), which is supported by the MusicXML format, expands on the Musical Symbols Unicode Block's 220 glyphs by using the Private Use Area in the Basic Multilingual Plane, permitting close to 2600 glyphs.
Finale 2012 was released in October 2011 with new functions as Finale's ScoreManager, Unicode text support, creation of PDF files, an updated setup Wizard, improved sound management. [4] In 2013, MakeMusic signed an agreement with Alfred Music. Under this agreement, Alfred Music became the sole distributor of Finale and Garritan products. [5]
Riffusion is classified within a subset of AI text-to-music generators. In December 2022, Mubert [46] similarly used Stable Diffusion to turn descriptive text into music loops. In January 2023, Google published a paper on their own text-to-music generator called MusicLM. [47] [48]
In April 2023, Suno released their open-source text-to-speech and audio model called "Bark" on GitHub and Hugging Face, under the MIT License. [4] [5] On March 21, 2024, Suno released its v3 version for all users. [6] The new version allows users to create a limited number of 4-minute songs using a free account. [7]
Music artist's instrumentals and lyrics are copyrighted but their voices aren't protected from regenerative AI yet, raising a debate about whether artists should get royalties from audio deepfakes. [74] Many AI music generators have been created that can be generated using a text phrase, genre options, and looped libraries of bars and riffs. [75]
Standard Music Font Layout, or SMuFL, is an open standard for music font mapping. [4] The standard [1] was originally developed by Daniel Spreadbury [4] [1] of Steinberg for its scorewriter software Dorico, [4] but is now developed and maintained by the W3C Music Notation Community Group, along with the standard for MusicXML (which, itself, supports SMuFL).