![]() ![]() But you may discover that, on closer inspection ( attachment lines help with this), the reading of the scan may have that forte attached above the third system. If you look at a page and see a forte marking below the second staff system, to your eye it’s applied to the note in that system. Much like a relationship gone awry, text also has “attachment issues”. Lyrics are most often successfully read correctly (although if I had a nickel for every ‘m’ that came out as ‘rn’…). ![]() That this can be done with any success at all is amazing. If there is an ‘A’ above the staff, is it a rehearsal mark, a chord symbol, a lyric from the staff above, ‘A tempo’ or something else? For instance, one of my favorite misfires (and this happened in several of the apps) is that the marcato symbol is often misinterpreted as an ‘A.’ Original source material The same material, as interpreted by OMR software The issue with text on a page is, ‘what type of text is it?’: page text, staff text, system text, lyrics, chord symbols, dynamics, etc. Generally, all of these apps read notes and rests on a scale of OK to excellent. To see those source materials for yourself, you can download them here. The first page of “NCL Celebrates-Rock”, one of the source tests The first page of “I Waited For The Lord” by Felix Mendelssohn, which is a PDF of a scan that has some schmutz on it (that is the technical term).“We Don’t Get Fooled Again”, a single page of a trumpet part I created in Dorico.“NCL Celebrates-Rock”, a three page piano vocal score I created in Sibelius several years ago.To test this software, I chose three PDFs that I felt would cover a range of music notation that I run into in my everyday work: Output: The edited file is now ready to print, save as a PDF, or export as a MusicXML for MIDI file which can be opened in music notation software or DAW for further cleanup or adaptation.Playback: The image is now in a form that can be played back within the app for proofing or use as a practice aid.Edit: The results of the previous step are presented in form that the user can edit, correct and further define the meaning of those musical symbols. ![]()
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