Short Album with Muse Sounds #17046
Replies: 7 comments 8 replies
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Sounds great! To be clear, GitHub is where development discussions are - here, and on Discord. But discussion of using MuseScore (e.g., support) remains on the forums. And discussions of music created with MuseScore really is more suited for musescore.com, although there is a "Made with MuseScore" forum on musescore.org as well. |
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To be honest, I have no idea. Probably just an experiment, "build it and see if they will come". I suspect maybe a motivation might have been, finding good examples to Muse Sounds being used in the real world to possibly highlight on social media or something. That's just guessing, though; I wasn't involved in setting this up. |
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For the record, when you upload your music from MuseScore to musescore.com, it includes your audio, including custom tweaks you made for the sake of playback. So if you're using Muse Sounds for the playback, it absolutely can be showcased on musescore.com, nuance and all. Even if you're also further processing the audio externally (eg, combining MuseScore-generated audio with sound effects etc), you can sync your score to an external audio source (currently only YouTube, but presumably audio.com would be coming soon as well). As for the distinction between concert suites and actual soundtrack, there is an audience for both, as you are no doubt aware. No reason the people interested in film music would be more likely to gravitate to a new untested site instead of just going to well-established site they also use for other types of music. And yes, it is unfortunate that there are some copyright violations on the site. That is be the case for any site that allows users to upload material. It's an enormous undertaking to get licenses from composers and publishers and to police u0loads to be sure that no music is uploaded that violates this. msuescore.com has more in place on both fronts - license agreements with tons of publishers & composers, and a process for checking and monitoring music. might not be perfect,t but there is almost no chance a new site started from scratch would be 1/10th as good at either of these. It's taken over a decade and a lot of time, effort, and money for musescore.com to develop these agreements and facilities. it would be a pretty daunting endeavor to try to recreate anything remotely like it. |
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Audio is absolutely uploaded with the score - assuming you upload directly from within MuseScore rather than trying to do it via a web browser. Only in the latter case does the site have to resort to the basic soundfont. Or, in older versions of MuseScore, if you choose not to upload the audio when publishing your score, but that option isn't even present in MuseScore 4. Publishing always uplaods audio. The fact that few current film composers are actually publishing their work on musescore.com doesn't mean there isn't interest - it just means that most haven't found seen a reason to. Not just film composers - same for professional composers in most other genres. Their loss, as far as I'm concerned. It may well be that restricting download is a Pro-only feature indeed; I have no real insights into the inner workings of that website. Seems reasonable, since the main purpose of that feature would be to allow professional composers/arrangers to charge others for their work, and thus it would seem these professional composers/arrangers might be willing to pay for the services they use as well. But anyhow, as I said, you can also sync to external audio, so you could always upload a "dummy" score and sync it to the audio from the real score. It does sync to the score if you use the facility to do that (it involves playing the audio and marking each measure in the score as you go). Still, if your goal is primarily to sell your music and not to share it, then indeed, musescore.com isn't really the right place. better to use on of the various commercial platforms offered y publishers such a JW Pepper or Hal Leonard, etc. Then people can hear the audio samples right on the same site they'd purchase from. The idea of a marketplace site to sell compositions and arrangements directly through musescore.com has of course come up before. Seems like a sound idea, but no doubt, a whole other discussion really. |
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Depends on how you define "nuance". As I said originally, "if you're using Muse Sounds for the playback, it absolutely can be showcased on musescore.com, nuance and all. Even if you're also further processing the audio externally (eg, combining MuseScore-generated audio with sound effects etc), you can sync your score to an external audio source". And again, it absolutely positively does sync in playback if you follow the instructions. So you absolutely positively can showcase both Muse Sounds and your own skill in further tweaking the playback via DAW software. As for whether it makes sense to reach out to potential fans or customers of your music by sharing it with them in some way, that's entirely up to you. Literally millions of people find it does make sense, but if it doesn't to you personally, then no one is forcing you to. But absolutely nothing about the fact that the music happens to be film cues changes this equation in any way whatsoever. Not sure where you got the idea that no one is interested in film cues exactly as recorded. That's just factually incorrect; I know many people who collect such music. I'm not sure what the goal posts even are, I'm simply trying to addressing incorrect statements or misunderstandings here. |
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Again, to get the audio to sync, you have to follow the instructions. The following quotes from you are all completely false, and that is why I have been volunteering my time in an effort to assist you:
These are all just objectively untrue, for the reasons I've been trying to explain. So I'm not sure what your point is here in continuing to argue. You can subjectively decide that despite the fact that the platform does work, that nuanced audio is possible, that it can be synced to the score, that there is an interest in actual film score music, you still don't have any personal interest in sharing your work. That's fine. But the facts are the facts. How you choose to respond them is up to you. |
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For the record, again, I tell people GitHub is the proper place for bug reports and for development discussions, because it. I have never once told people to come here to post their music, because it's the wrong place for that. And again, it's fine for you to decide not to take advantage of the features of musescore.com. I just wanted to correct the erroneous statements being made about it. If correcting those had been enough ton convince you to use the site, then great. If you still don't find it compelling, that's fine too. I've already responding to the individual points in quite some detail; I don't know what additional examples you'd need. Feel free to ask for further clarification. i remain willing to volunteer my time to assist. |
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It's really quiet around here. Some moderators over at the .org forum are saying that github is where the real discussion is, but it's just 'crickets' in this discussion thread.
I'll try to get the ball rolling here...
This is a short album of original works that was rendered using Muse Sounds. The first 4 pieces are all Muse Sounds, but the 5th is Virtual Playing Orchestra and other libraries. I composed each piece for a member of my immediate family, one for my wife, two for each of my kids and one for myself, plus one additional piece. My platform is Linux and the render version was 4.0 (so there was a bit of 'hacking' to get around score corruptions, playback bugs and sound library flaws in the early release).
Enjoy some Muse Sounds!
https://soundcloud.com/carl-irwin/sets/familiar
Thank you to the developers that put this remarkable play engine and library together!
-Carl Irwin
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