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Music Open Source News

MuseScore Makes Open Goldberg Variations Available 1

rDouglass writes "MuseScore, the open source music notation project, has created a new edition of Bach's Goldberg Variations, and a set of online tools that facilitates the public scholarly review of the work. The review period is intended to help the MuseScore team identify any problems with the score. The score can be viewed and played in the browser. Annotations and discussions for each part of the score enable review and corrections. Downloadable versions include MuseScore, MusicXML, MIDI, mp3, or PDF. Video scores (YouTube videos that are synchronized to play with the score) let the score be viewed in the context of individual performances. MuseScore is a partner in the Open Goldberg Variations Project, a crowd-funded effort to place a definitive score and recording of the work into the public domain in such a way as to make them widely and freely available, without usage restrictions (Creative Commons Zero). German pianist Kimiko Ishizka will produce the studio recording of the work later this year. Funding continues on Kickstarter until June 3, 2011."
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MuseScore Makes Open Goldberg Variations Available

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  • OK, I'll start off by saying that I have now, and TTBOMK have always had, pretty shit hearing. Friends who have finally comprehended that I really mean it when I say "I can't hear what you're talking about", have asked me if I didn't try to get my hearing repaired when I realised there was a problem, and then continued to look puzzled when I say that I don't have a hearing problem, I just hear different things to them. Their experience of "hearing" may be different to mine, but I don't have any reason to be

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