Candlelight Carol Correction uploaded

Hello kind Followers and Visitors,

I made a mistake in a recent choir piece I uploaded a few weeks ago.  I had rehearsed it with the choir a several times and weirdly no one noticed that I had accidentally written the soprano line at the bottom of page five an octave lower.  They had just been singing what had felt right to them.

sigh…….moving on…..

So, I have updated the Candlight Carol and fixed the error, you can find it here on my 
Christmas page.

I feel a need to add a disclaimer: 

“I am not a professional musician, so any music you download from this site is for entertainment purposes only ~ this music is not intended to be used as a substitute for real music written by trained and schooled professionals.”

I think I will be adding that to my footer later.

I am grateful to those who do visit my site and choose to follow my updates and occasional blogs.  I hope that overtime, I can improve my ability to catch the flaws or find a bestie music friend who can help me catch them before I fling them all over the globe.

If I don’t post again before Christmas ~ Have a blessed one.

Love you all,

Elizabeth 🙂

New HUGE Updates to Musescore!

Hello, Music Friends! Quick Note ~  I just received an update notice from Musescore that has me soooo excited!  

I watched the video update intro embedded below and was instilled with inspiration and musical joy to hear that the sound library has been abundantly added to and I am able to save my music with its custom sounds online too!  🙂

Here is the latest news as of May 2, 2017: 

“MuseScore 2.1 is released

While the development of MuseScore 3 is ongoing and we are rebuilding a lot of features from the ground up, we wanted to bring you some of that work sooner—so here comes MuseScore 2.1! Built on top of the 2.0 series, with cherry-picked developments from the in-progress MuseScore 3, MuseScore 2.1 offers a bunch of new features and 300+ bug fixes and user interface improvements, making it both our most powerful and our most stable version yet.”

Which is my favorite improvement???  The “swap command”!

You can find the entire list of improvements in the Musescore Release Notes.

Watch the intro:

What is Musecore?  

It is an opensource – FREE – robust music notation program that makes it possible to share music with the world without breaking the budget.  

We all know that most artists are often tight on means and usually have to hobby their first love to reality – the full-time facts of life.  Without musescore, I would still be writing my music on paper.  

~ Much thanks to all who are impassioned towards music for creating this amazing software and blessing our talents with the greater possibilities – for without this generous offering our music might not have ever been seen, heard or performed. ~

If you have not yet tried Musescore – this is a perfect time to do so: https://musescore.org/en/download

Happy Notating!  🙂

I did not mean to be neglectful…

it’s just….earlier this year I was blessed to be called to be the Music Director for our little branch.  It was a pretty easy calling, choosing hymns and leading the congregation and though I felt the need for a challenge, I … Continue reading

Wow, this year closed so quickly…

First I want to apologize.

I felt like I had dropped the ball toward the latter half of December, undoubtedly dissapointing a portion of the 47 visitors I received on December 23rd.

I did not get as much as much Christmas music posted as had mapped out on paper.

 My Excuse???

Kids getting sick, part-time job sapping my energy and feeling super sleepy lately, I did not feel as productive as I could have been.

Other Excuse???

I also decided to test the Musescore 2.0 Beta program, which has some nice WoWs to it, but not enough to take a chance on losing my entire score – twice! – when it hit a glitch.

I found it to be unstable with my Windows 7, especially after listening to the music and then trying to make changes to the score.
I will let you know when I think it is stable and ready for prime-time. 

So I am back to Musescore 1.3  – which is without all the fancy stuff, but my scores are safe.

Moral of this story?: Don’t test a new software program when you have a deadline.

Wondering…

I am not sure if the music I am posting is helpful either.  
I see the visitors, but I am not getting much feedback.

If any of you have suggestions, or if you find a wrong note, please, please, please let me know.

This next week, I may work on ‘Ring Out Wild Bells’, but we will see.

My plans for the new year are:

Publish the sacrament hymns for simplified organ, in as simple a style as I can.
Add a sacrament hymn page tab to make them easier to find.
Publish themed hymns, ie: love, Easter, the Restoration, patriotic, some children’s songs and maybe even a few of my own pieces.

Thank you for visiting my ‘work-in-progress’ these past six months.  I hope I can work out the glitches and publish music that is helpful and enjoyable to play.

Elizabeth 🙂

Happy New Year!!!

Three more Christmas hymns posted…


christmas-music-02Three more Christmas hymns have been posted this morning:

 #205 ~ Once in Royal Davids City

#209 ~ Hark! The Herald Angel’s Sing ~
without lyric text – ran out of time and it fits on a single sheet of paper.

#210 ~ With Wondering Awe

My goal is to have more done soon – between work, kids and Christmas, it sure has been busy around here!

Download the free sheet music under the Christmas Tab.

 

New Free Christmas Sheet Music Tab!

Chrchristmas-music-02istmas, Christmas, Christmas ~ I love Christmas!

I have recently arranged several beloved Christmas hymns, from the LDS Hymnal, for simplified and intermediate organ.

Check out the new ‘Christmas’ music tab!

These hymns are specifically written for the newbie to intermediate organist who would like to add pedal to congregation accompaniments and prelude music.

You can find these new arrangements under the ‘Christmas’ Tab.

Merry Christmas!  🙂

 

 

Working with Musescore

 

MuseScore  logo

I would be remiss if I didn’t start by saying
that if someone were to offer me Sibelius,
I would totally drop Musescore
and run back to the program I love.

Alas, this 600 dollar music program is beyond my reach, and so I use my next choice:  Musescore.

I have Noteflight and use it periodically, but I find that unless I buy the membership the program is too simple for my needs.

I need to be able to make whatever adjustment I want.

I really do find Noteflight to be a very good musical program, especially when I need to compose on the run and I have an internet connection, but unless I can afford the extras, I am stuck with little control over my score.

Musescore leans toward Finale and Sibelius.

I want to state that the only time I ever used Finale was a maybe a freebee like 8 years ago? I was writing by hand and I decided to just stick to that.

Quite a few years ago, a friend of mine had Sibelius 2 and we corroborated on some music. I was very impressed and fell in love ~ not with my friend, but with her music notation program.

I may try Finale someday and maybe change my mind ~ but the 139.00 price tag, which is hundreds below Sibelius, is still out of my budget range.

Now it would seem that I am downplaying the value of Musescore.  I assure you, I am not.

There is a learning curve though, and I am not a ‘curve’ kinda girl.
I resist change and find learning new techy stuff overwhelming and frustrating sometimes.  Mostly because I KNOW that the program is usually only as smart and the person using it, and I don’t like admitting that I am not always as bright as tin foil.

On youtube there are some sparse tutorials for Musescore, but the Formatting video was extremely helpful.  Musescore does not have floating systems, you cannot drag them and adjust them the way you like ~ such as Sibelius allows.

I was able to get the program to bend to my will after a frustrating 20 minutes of trying to stretch my last stanza. It would make an extra page with the last measure and, of course, I didn’t want that.

I decided to ‘trick’ the program.  I inserted an extra empty measure, copied and pasted the last measure into it. I then created a new horizontal break, which separated the empty measure and left it hanging.  Normally the measure is deleted and all is well – not this last time.  Every time I deleted this extra measure, my stanza would shrink on the previous page!  I could not stretch it, because I would be left with the last measure on the next page problem again.

So, instead of deleting that last measure after separating it from the pack, I first changed the bar at the end of the previous measure to reflect that I was at the end of the musical composition.  This forced the software to ignore the extra separated measure at the end, and I was able to delete it without any repercussion.

Yay!  I felt very empowered!  Especially since I figured this out all by myself!  🙂

I hope that by writing this post I can refer back to it, in case I forget what I did to fix the problem.  I also figured out how to get my ‘note = tempo’ to look like the note I wanted to represent.  I downloaded a music note font and used the letter ‘q’ and it turned into the cutest little quarter note.  🙂

The hymn that ‘bent to my will’ today was:
Hymn # 98  I_Need_Thee_Every_Hour_Simplified_Organ

I  simplified it and adapted it for the organ ~ Enjoy.  🙂

I just replaced the last copy with one that had ALL the versesSorry.  :/ (06/28/14)

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