I went through about thirty minutes of downloading and clicked the icon. I know that Finale is great and all, but I tried to get it as a free trial for 30 days. Each version gets better sounding and easier to use. I’ve been using Finale for over a decade, and I don’t need musicians to hear what my music will sound like in real life. For the full version, try to get it under an academic or religious license – very much cheaper. There are different levels of Finale depending on what you want to do with it. It won’t interpret the tempo change, but it will sort of look okay. Kira – in Notepad, try using the text tool. Does anyone know a way to put that in there? I am not finding it. Hey, I can’t seem to figure out how to put in a ritard. Sorry, I don’t offer support on that software. I love the finale tool bar but its hard to use can you help me pete? It sucks if you try to use it to write music for drums I am planning a concert in the fall, and need to print the music for my pianist…but my printer is down, and my work computer (complete with adobe) won’t read it. I downloaded finale notepad onto my home computer (as I can’t afford finale) but I can’t get it to save as anything but a. I have a tocata I composed while in a composition class at college. Hi Scott, I couldn’t find a pedal tool, but used the line tool instead to create the three lines that would make up a pedal mark (doesn’t look so smooth if you need continuous pedaling). Hi Peter, my daughter loves notepad but is frustrated on creating pedal marks…how’d you do it? You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.Ģ9 Responses to “Free music notation software (create your own sheet music): Finale NotePad” This entry is filed under Computer Stuff and written by Peter Keung.
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