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Scoring Notes
Author: Scoring Notes
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© 2024 NYC Music Services
Description
We love music notation software and related products and technology, so that’s what we cover here. You’ll find timely news, in-depth coverage about the field, and honest reviews about products you use every day. You’ll learn about the interesting people in our field and find out our opinions on ever-changing developments in the industry.
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We’re very pleased to bring you this episode, and more to come in the future, thanks to our friends at Twenty Thousand Hertz, a podcast that tells the stories behind the world’s most recognizable and interesting sounds.
People with perfect or “absolute” pitch hear every single sound as precise musical notes. Is this extraordinary talent a blessing or a curse? In this episode, our friends at Twenty Thousand Hertz dive into the neuroscience, pluses, and pitfalls of absolute pitch. Featuring neuroscientist Daniel Levitin and Grammy-winning musician Jacob Collier.
Art by Mafalda Maia.
Music featured in this episode:
Hide and Seek by Jacob Collier
Light It Up On Me by Jacob Collier
Down the Line by Jacob Collier
To Sleep by Jacob Collier
All I Need by Jacob Collier
Bakumbe by Jacob Collier
Hideaway by Jacob Collier
Colrain by Marble Run
Sky Above by Jacob Collier
Moon River by Jacob Collier
A Noite by Jacob Collier
Connect by Steven Gutheinz
Count the People by Jacob Collier
Twenty Thousand Hertz is produced out of the studios of Defacto Sound, and hosted by Dallas Taylor.
‘Tis the season to be thankful for all of the products and services in the world of music notation software and related technology, and for the Scoring Notes audience who tunes in to hear us opine on them! We show our appreciation by bearing good tidings and do a little shopping to find some Black Friday deals and make a few recommendations for fun and productivity.
Black Friday 2025 deals for music notation software and related tech post coming on Monday, November 24
Show notes:
Scoring Notes Product Guide, with links to posts about Dorico, Sibelius, and MuseScore updates from the past year
Black Friday products and deals:
Steinberg Cyber Deals
MakeMusic discounted crossgrade to Dorico
Avid Black Friday Savings
MuseScore
Sheet Music Direct
Sheet Music Plus
Newzik
Notation Central, Notation Express, Scoring Express, MTF Fonts, NorFonts
Rogue Amoeba
PDF Expert Black Friday deals
Elgato
Audio production deals on Reddit
Adobe Creative Cloud
Setapp
CleanMyMac
Dropzone
CleanShot
Soulver
Forklift
Affinity by Canva
PopChar
TRMNL
Glance LED
Logitech B100 Wired Mouse
We talk a lot about fonts on the Scoring Notes podcast. But there was a time when there were no music fonts. And then, there was one.
Cleo Huggins, on the staff of Adobe in 1986, designed Sonata, the very first music font. It’s hard to imagine today, but it was revolutionary at the time, and a leading industry publication called it the “Music Product of the Year”. Sonata provided the blueprint for the core music fonts later created for use in Finale and Sibelius, but it may surprise you to learn that Sonata was created without any one particular music software product in mind.
Cleo tells Philip Rothman and David MacDonald about her early studies with some of the great typographic experts of the 1970 and 1980s, and how her work in graphic design, 3-D animation, background as a violinist, and a key meeting with Steve Jobs about the launch of the first Macintosh computer all led to her taking responsibility for creating Sonata. Cleo discusses the revolution in PostScript technology and the introduction of the laser printer, and how that made it possible for her to create a high quality music font that was unconstrained by limitations of bitmapping.
She recalls the various sources of inspiration and research she did — everything from Bach’s manuscript to the Music Writer, to Notaset dry transfer sheets — and the process of regularizing beautiful calligraphy without losing the distinctive elements of music notation. She also recalls thinking about all the minute details from careful placement to the key mapping of each character, and the feedback received from early music software pioneers eager to incorporate Sonata into their programs.
Cleo’s career moved on from Sonata to a variety of endeavors, all propelled by a deep curiosity and propensity to good, and we talk about that too — and ask her if she’d ever come back to the world of music fonts, with all of the progress that has taken place in the nearly four decades since her groundbreaking work transformed the history of music notation.
More on Scoring Notes:
Music Type Foundry fonts newly revised and re-released
Download and install all Finale fonts on Mac and Windows
MuseScore Studio 4.6 adds full SMuFL support, other engraving and playback updates
Cantorum, a plainchant font for Dorico
Introducing Lelandia, a new suite of music fonts for Sibelius
Daniel Spreadbury on music fonts: past, present, and future
Music fonts and open standards with Daniel Spreadbury
A brief history of music notation on computers
Back to the future of music notation on computers
How to make a SMuFL font
A fount of fonts at Notation Central
Introducing the Norfolk and Pori chord symbol fonts for Sibelius — and an angled slash variant
From the Finale Blog:
Meet Steve Peha, creator of Petrucci, Finale’s first music font
A brief history of Finale fonts
Recent updates abound in Dorico, MuseScore Studio, Sibelius, and across the Apple operating systems. Whether you use all of these products or just one of them, we help you get current with the latest features and improvements, so that you can make the most of the notation software and the operating systems they run on.
More from Scoring Notes:
Music notation software and macOS Tahoe
Dorico 6.1: Select more
MuseScore Studio 4.6 adds full SMuFL support, other engraving and playback updates
Sibelius 2025.7 brings note spacing control, UI updates
Sibelius updated to 2025.8
File system tools mentioned:
Onyx
CleanMyMac
Freelancing is a kind of freedom. Freedom from a regular schedule, an office, or a permanent boss. But with freelance work comes responsibility.
Part of your job as a freelancer is deciding what the work should be and finding the clients who are going pay you to do it. Not only are you responsible to them, but you’re responsible for yourself, your family, the tax man, and more.
In the music notation software and related technology world of Scoring Notes, it’s possible to have freelance work in which those tools are used regularly.
Paul Beck is principal librarian of the Milwaukee Symphony, concert librarian for Renée Fleming, and formerly librarian at, among other institutions, The Metropolitan Opera, The Juilliard School, and the Aspen Music Festival & School. Paul joins Philip Rothman and David MacDonald to talk all about his decades of experience both as a freelance music preparer and salaried performance librarian, and to offer a wealth of insights and practical advice for anyone seeking freedom — and responsibility — as a freelancer.
This wide-ranging and detailed conversation explores the methods and manners of pursuing freelance work; the differences and similarities among being a freelancer, independent contractor, part-time employee, and full-time employee — and the benefits and drawbacks of each; managing your time and boundaries as a freelancer; the importance of mentors; essential tools; and specific advice about finances, invoices, and payment processing options.
More from Scoring Notes:
An interview with librarian Paul Beck
Road report: Copland’s Rodeo in Milwaukee
How to charge for music preparation
Chronology of a perfect music printing job
The tale of the tape
The staples of printing self-published music
We open the Scoring Notes mailbag, contemplate the musings of our audience, and try to leave no question unanswered in this fun and informative podcast episode.
More from Scoring Notes, referenced in this episode:
Finale’s twilight zone: Ensuring a smooth ride into the sunset
Using Finale in the unsupported era
Leaving Finale behind
The rights stuff, with Jim Kendrick
Scanning the current OMR landscape
Partying with parts, part 1
Partying with parts, part 2
Working with page numbers in Sibelius
Better Sibelius slurs for opposite stem direction on outer notes
Marie Chupeau and the human side of Newzik’s artificial intelligence
From “zero to slice”: Soundslice takes on optical music recognition with AI
Sibelius 2022.5 brings multi-section headers, other workflow boosts
Have you ever listened to an episode of the Scoring Notes podcast and wished you could ask a question directly on the show?
Two years ago, we opened up the phone lines directly, so to speak, and they were jam-packed! So much so, that we ended up devoting three episodes to answering those burning queries. You can find Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3 in the podcast archives.
Well, time and technology moves fast, so it’s time we do it again. Whether you’re a “long-timer” or a “first-timer”, all are welcome to ask a question about anything in the world of music notation software and related technology — or really, any one of the adjacent subjects we’ve covered on the Scoring Notes podcast or web site, and we may feature it an upcoming episode.
Just record your question as a voice memo and drop it directly here, or send it as an email attachment or as a file-sharing link to podcast@scoringnotes.com. We’d love it if you provide your name (first name only is OK), where in the world you’re calling from, and what music notation software you use — or if you don’t use it at all (yes, we have quite a few listeners in that camp).
If you’re shy, you can alternatively write your question in an email and send it to us.
Send us your question no later than Monday, July 14, 2025.
From the archive: How we don’t use music notation software (but do use related technology)
The rest of today’s episode is a classic one from March 2023, and perhaps it will spur some new questions.
Sometimes music notation software is perfect for the job, but other times, it’s the related technology that’s better suited to the task. Fortunately, we cover both sides of the equation on Scoring Notes — and it’s the latter part that Philip Rothman and David MacDonald discuss on this podcast episode.
When creating scores and parts, music notation software is clearly the choice. But what about front matter — the pages of text and sometimes other markings and symbols that preface the music? For that, better options may exist. We look at the pros and cons of making that material directly in music notation software, and suggest apps for when it’s helpful to split the job.
We talk about some of our favorite apps specifically for working with PDFs and the surprising number of ways that you can edit a file using those apps — and may need to do so — without actually having access to the music notation files or the software.
What about when you need to make music notation outside of notation software? For that, there is a whole suite of fonts designed to create music notation within non-music apps. They’re called MusFonts, and Dan Kreider created them to fill this niche.
For many users, creating audio is an essential component of music notation software, and we outline ways to complement the built-in process of making MIDI mockups with other software without getting too complicated.
Finally, we give a shout-out to our favorite piece of related technology.
More from Scoring Notes:
Export PDF to true black in Finale, and a macro for all parts
Fix printing problems with Sibelius, PDFs, and Acrobat
Quickly scale many PDFs with PDF-BatchScale
Make booklets and 2-ups with PDF-BatchBooklet
PDF-MusicBinder and PDF-BatchStitch utilities for music printing
File renaming and PDF batch utilities
MusGlyphs, an advanced music text font
MusGlyphs updated to 2.1; text version added
MusAnalysis, an advanced font for musical analysis
MusFrets, a font for chord diagrams
Introducing Ambitus, a new font for pitch incipits, scales, and range diagrams
Preparing teaching materials in music notation software
“Playing” with notation software, part 1 of 2
“Playing” with notation software, part 2 of 2
Apps and fonts we talk about:
Microsoft Word
Apple Pages
Affinity
Adobe Acrobat
PDF-BatchScale
PDF-BatchStitch
PDF-BatchBooklet
PDF-MusicBinder
PDF Squeezer
PDF Expert
MusGlyphs
MusAnalysis
MusFrets
Ambitus
Hosted by The University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre & Dance in Ann Arbor, Michigan, the 43rd annual conference of MOLA: An Association of Performance Librarians ran from May 30 through June 2, 2025, and brought together music librarians, publishers, vendors, composers, performers, and technology enthusiasts.
The 2025 conference was the first one hosted by a university, reflecting the organization’s broader membership. It spotlighted the working environments of the academic performance librarian and offered opportunities to cross-pollinate ideas across ensemble tiers and types.
On the podcast, David MacDonald and Philip Rothman recap the 2025 MOLA Conference recorded in person from the University of Michigan, with a summary of the tech fair and conference sessions on broadening access, copyright, professional development, IMSLP, and much more.
And, if you like your podcasts in video format, we have a special treat for you: A video of this podcast episode, recorded live.
More from Scoring Notes: Road report: MOLA 2025 Conference
Steinberg’s product marketing manager Daniel Spreadbury returns to the podcast to discuss Dorico 6 and its bevy of features for music composers and preparers. Daniel talks in-depth with Philip Rothman and David MacDonald about a few of the headline items, especially those that are unique to Dorico. The new proofreading tool continuously scans a project looking for potential pitfalls, and the cutaway scores feature makes quick work of what was once a tedious effort. We explore those key elements of Dorico 6 along with cycle playback, grids, fill view, chord symbols, and more, learning more about their origins and what’s planned for the future.
We also reflect with Daniel about the software’s trajectory in the past decade. Dorico has gotten ever more capable in the audio area in recent years, more deeply integrated with Cubase, Steinberg’s digital audio workstation, and Daniel takes us behind the scenes to tell us about the decisions and development plans in those areas. Finale’s end has also brought challenges and opportunities for the Dorico team, and we discuss how Steinberg’s partnership with MakeMusic and its endorsed path to Dorico has influenced the product’s direction over the past year.
More from Scoring Notes:
Dorico 6 review: Proof positive
We’re very pleased to bring you this episode, and more to come in the future, thanks to our friends at Twenty Thousand Hertz, a podcast that tells the stories behind the world’s most recognizable and interesting sounds.
From electric guitars to samplers to drum machines and beyond, the music we love is only possible thanks to the technology used to create it. In many ways, the history of popular music is really a history of technological innovation. In this episode, Twenty Thousand Hertz partnered with BandLab to unpack four inventions that changed music forever. Featuring author and journalist Greg Milner.
Music featured in this episode:
Original music by Wesley Slover
Prelude by Ghostnaut
To Little, With Love by Elvin Vanguard
And All the Rest by Dream Cave
Subtractions by Epocha
To Find You (with KYAND) by Modera
Out Linear by Sweet Stare
Grumpalo by High Horse
Grand Theft by Katori Walker
One Day by Ten Towers
Hopscotch Bop by Stan Forebee
I Feel You by Yuppycult
Swing Step by iamalex
Here With You by Super Duper
Twenty Thousand Hertz is produced out of the studios of Defacto Sound, and hosted by Dallas Taylor.
If you hear the term “forensic musicologist” and conjure up detectives with fingerprint dusters and a magnifying glass, well, metaphorically you’re not far off. The job of a forensic musicologist is to apply musical knowledge to questions around copyright, explain musical facts, and put them into context so that a court can arrive at a decision with the best information available.
Brian McBrearty is a forensic musicologist, and he joins Philip Rothman and David MacDonald to discuss real-world cases of music infringement and the multi-dimensional approach that he takes in his analyses. We tackle the question of music notation and how it plays a role in Brian’s process, and talk tech — including the acceleration in artificial intelligence, both as a potential means of forensic analysis, and as a creator of potentially infringing content.
More on Scoring Notes:
The rights stuff, with Jim Kendrick
At the 2025 NAMM Show, we interviewed representatives from the businesses in our field of music notation software and related technology.
This podcast episode is a conversation Philip Rothman had with John Barron, the international product specialist for Dorico. NAMM offers representatives like John the opportunity to meet with customers from both the notation and audio sides of the music community. We spoke about the new Dorico-powered score editor in Cubase that appeals to a large cross-section of users, and how Dorico fits into the wider world of Steinberg and Yamaha products. We also discussed industry developments and what he’s hearing from Finale users as they explore the officially-endorsed migration path to Dorico.
Be sure to check out our other conversations from the NAMM Show from earlier this month. And as always, if you like this podcast episode, there’s plenty more for you from Scoring Notes — be sure to follow us right in your podcast player.
More about the 2025 NAMM Show from Scoring Notes:
NAMM 2025: On the scene
NAMM 2025: Decondensing Sibelius with Avid’s Sam Butler
NAMM 2025: Imbibing transcribing with Oriol López Calle
NAMM 2025: Musing on software and design with Martin Keary
NAMM 2025: On with the show with Steinberg’s John Barron
NAMM 2025: An interview with Avid’s Sam Butler
NAMM 2025: An interview with Oriol López Calle
NAMM 2025: An interview with Martin Keary
At the 2025 NAMM Show, we interviewed representatives from the businesses in our field of music notation software and related technology.
This podcast episode is a conversation Philip Rothman had with Martin Keary, the head of software for Muse Group. Martin spoke with me about the conversations he had at NAMM about some of the exciting possibilities for MuseScore collaborations and integrations with other app makers in the future. More practically, we also discussed recent MuseScore development efforts and some of the new features we can expect to see in upcoming releases, as well as the role that industry changes like the end of Finale played in the road map for the software.
Come back next week for more conversations from the NAMM Show. And as always, if you like this podcast episode, there’s plenty more for you from Scoring Notes — be sure to follow us right in your podcast player.
More about the 2025 NAMM Show from Scoring Notes:
NAMM 2025: On the scene
NAMM 2025: Decondensing Sibelius with Avid’s Sam Butler
NAMM 2025: Imbibing transcribing with Oriol López Calle
NAMM 2025: Musing on software and design with Martin Keary
NAMM 2025: On with the show with Steinberg’s John Barron
NAMM 2025: An interview with Avid’s Sam Butler
NAMM 2025: An interview with Oriol López Calle
At the 2025 NAMM Show, we interviewed representatives from the businesses in our field of music notation software and related technology.
This podcast episode is a conversation Philip Rothman had with Oriol López Calle from My Sheet Music Transcriptions, a service that he founded in 2011 that has since grown to employ dozens of people and serve tens of thousands of customers. Oriol told us about his company’s approach to their work, which includes not only transcribing but a full range of music preparation tasks. We also discussed technological innovations that have already transformed the business and those that we expect to do so in the future.
Come back the next couple of weeks for more conversations from the NAMM Show. And as always, if you like this podcast episode, there’s plenty more for you from Scoring Notes — be sure to follow us right in your podcast player.
More about the 2025 NAMM Show from Scoring Notes:
NAMM 2025: On the scene
NAMM 2025: Decondensing Sibelius with Avid’s Sam Butler
NAMM 2025: Imbibing transcribing with Oriol López Calle
NAMM 2025: Musing on software and design with Martin Keary
NAMM 2025: On with the show with Steinberg’s John Barron
NAMM 2025: An interview with Avid’s Sam Butler
At the 2025 NAMM Show, we interviewed representatives from the businesses in our field of music notation software and related technology.
This podcast episode is a conversation Philip Rothman had with Sam Butler, Avid’s director of product management. Sam talked with us about the new decondensing parts feature in Sibelius that Avid previewed at NAMM, and he celebrated the award that his team received for last year’s release of the Android app. He also shared his thoughts on the industry’s developments over the past year, the direction that he anticipates for the future, and what it all means for Sibelius customers.
Come back the next few weeks for more conversations from the NAMM Show. And as always, if you like this podcast episode, there’s plenty more for you from Scoring Notes — be sure to follow us right in your podcast player.
More about the 2025 NAMM Show from Scoring Notes:
NAMM 2025: On the scene
NAMM 2025: Decondensing Sibelius with Avid’s Sam Butler
NAMM 2025: Imbibing transcribing with Oriol López Calle
NAMM 2025: Musing on software and design with Martin Keary
NAMM 2025: On with the show with Steinberg’s John Barron
This episode was written by Andrew Anderson.
We’re very pleased to bring you this episode, and more to come in the future, thanks to our friends at Twenty Thousand Hertz, a podcast that tells the stories behind the world’s most recognizable and interesting sounds.
The history of recorded sound stretches back over a hundred and fifty years, starting with a device that could “record” a voice on a piece of paper. Today, we can enjoy lossless streaming anywhere we go… but getting here wasn’t easy. In this episode, our friends at Twenty Thousand Hertz worked with Qobuz, the high quality music platform, to chart the history of audio mediums, from cylinders made of tin foil and wax, to vinyl, 8-track, cassette, CDs, and mp3s. Along the way, they explore the innovations and quirks of each format, with memories sent in from their listeners and the 20K team. Featuring Adam Tovell from the British Library Sound Archive.
Then, stay tuned afterwards as David MacDonald and Philip Rothman tie all of this “related technology” back to the “music notation” portion of the Scoring Notes mission, and explore how music notation and recorded sound are complementary sides of what makes a song a song.
Further reading:
What Is a Song?, by Ben Sisario from The New York Times, about the copyright questions raised in the lawsuit involving Marvin Gaye’s “Let’s Get It On” and Ed Sheeran’s song “Thinking Out Loud”.
Further listening:
The [COMPRESSED] history of mastering
Music featured in this episode:
Original music by Wesley Slover
Steppin Intro by Sound of Picture
Paraphrase on Sleeping Beauty by Paul Pabst
Greylock by Skittle
Lonely Summertime by The Rockin’ Berries
Ding Dong by Niklas Gabrielsson
Bebop Blues by Vendla
Living Memories by Golden Age Radio
Gin Boheme by Vermouth
Forever in Love With a Ghost by PÄR
You Oughta Know by Rockin’ For Decades
Back in Time by They Fall
Pink Gloves by J.F. Gloss
Dreamweavers by Sven Lindvall & Daniel Fridell
No One Knows But Me by Torii Wolf
Tour 505 by Epocha
Blipper by Sound of Picture
October by UTAH
Do You by KENA
Twenty Thousand Hertz is produced out of the studios of Defacto Sound, and hosted by Dallas Taylor.
Art by Divya Tak.
Music scanning technology, or optical music recognition (OMR) if you like, has been around for decades, and yet in many ways is still barely out of infancy. But that could soon change as classic algorithm-based desktop programs converge with newer mobile apps and web-based machine learning tools.
Steve Morell joins Philip Rothman and David MacDonald to discuss his review of six of those products that run the gamut of those technologies: Newzik, Soundslice, PlayScore 2, Sheet Music Scanner, SmartScore 64 Pro 64 NE, and ScanScore Professional. He takes on through his process of testing each of them from the common perspective of a user wanting to get a quick and accurate scan for exporting via MusicXML to other software such as Sibelius, Dorico, or MuseScore.
However, those applications have many other use cases. We explore those as well, and how each of the products may be suited to one particular use or another in their own way. We also envision where the industry is headed and how these technologies could potentially evolve in the future.
Read the full Scoring Notes review: Scanning the current OMR landscape
‘Tis the season to be thankful for all of the products and services in the world of music notation software and related technology, and for the Scoring Notes audience who tunes in to hear us opine on them! We show our appreciation by bearing good tidings in the form of a summary of all of the updates to MuseScore, Dorico, and Sibelius over the past year. Then, Philip Rothman and David MacDonald do a little shopping to find some Black Friday deals and make a few recommendations for fun and productivity.
Black Friday 2024 deals for music notation software and related tech
Show notes:
Scoring Notes Product Guide, with links to posts about MuseScore, Dorico, and Sibelius updates from the past year
Black Friday products and deals we mention:
MakeMusic discounted crossgrade to Dorico
Steinberg Cyber Deals
Avid Black Friday Savings
PDF Expert Black Friday deals
Acon Digital Black Friday sale
Muse Hub
StaffPad on iPad and Windows
Notation Central, Notation Express, Scoring Express, NorFonts
Bambu Lab Black Friday Sale
Studio Neat Mark pens
Sidekick Notepad from Cortex
Matthew Maslanka’s Beam Slants Reference Poster
Henle engraving plate
Samsung T7 SSD, T7 Shield SSD, T9 SSD
Xkey 25 MIDI controller
Nektar SE25 and Se49 MIDI controllers
Logitech MX Keys S – Windows and MX Keys Mini – Windows
Logitech MX Keys S – Mac and Logitech MX Keys Mini – Mac
Music education isn’t just learning how to read alto clef and knowing your intervals anymore. The evolution of music technology education, the changing attitudes of students towards music production, and the importance of teaching foundational skills alongside technology have made the collegiate experience in music more diverse than ever. In this episode, Philip Rothman and David MacDonald engage with guest Ben Fuhrman, a composer and music tech professor at Montana State University. They explore the preparation and skills students bring to music tech programs, focusing on music notation software, DAWs like FL Studio, Pro Tools, and Ableton Live, and the influence of high-profile artists on student choices. Skills that may seem trivial like file management are actually very important, complementing the understanding of concepts in preparing students for diverse careers in music technology.
We also touch upon the evolving nature of music careers, the necessity for students to have both technical and traditional musical knowledge, and the impact of collaborative learning environments in fostering empathy and curiosity in the rapidly changing landscape of music technology.
More from Scoring Notes:
Sample rate, bit depth, bit rate, and you(r ears)
Katie Wardrobe on music tech in education [encore]
Finale, the legendary music notation software program, has been discontinued 36 years after its groundbreaking release in 1988 from Coda Music Technologies. MakeMusic, the company that now owns Finale, has partnered with Steinberg to sell its Dorico application at a specially discounted price directly to Finale users. Jason Loffredo joins Philip Rothman and David MacDonald in a comprehensive discussion about the facts, the business analysis, and the way forward for customers.
More on Scoring Notes:
MakeMusic ends development and availability of Finale; partners with Steinberg to sell Dorico directly [updated]
Finale version 27 review: SMuFL and MusicXML 4.0 support
Finale v27 and the SMuFL shuffle
Finale version 27.1: SMuFL burrows deeper
Finale version 27.2 adds new jazz template, native Apple silicon support
Finale version 27.3 adds eight powerful JW tools, fixes some linked part issues
Finale version 27.4 supports macOS Sonoma, true black printing, other fixes
Jason Loffredo’s “Conquering Finale” video tutorial series


![Cleo Huggins, the designer of the first music font [encore] Cleo Huggins, the designer of the first music font [encore]](https://www.scoringnotes.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/sonata-font-square-alt-1.jpg)


