Redirected from Musical score
Reading sheet music is the standard way to learn a piece in some cultures and some styles of music. In western classical music, it is very rare for a performer to learn a piece in any other way, and even in jazz music, which is mostly improvised, there is lots of sheet music describing arrangements, melodies, and chord changes.
Sheet music is not so important in other forms of music, however. In popular music, although sheet music is produced, it is nowadays more usual for people to learn the piece by ear. This is also the case in most forms of western folk music. Musics of other cultures, both folk and classical, are often transmitted orally, though some have sheet music, and a few use hand signals or some other device as a learning mnemonic.
Sheet music may come in several different forms. If a piece is written for just one instrument (for example, a piano), all the music will be written on just one piece of sheet music. If a piece is intended to be played by more than one person, each person will usually have their own piece of sheet music. If there are a large number of performers required for a piece, there may also be a score, which is a piece of sheet music which shows all or most of the instruments' music in one place. Scores come in various forms:
It should be noted that the word score can also refer to the incidental music written for something such as a play, television programme or film (when it is called a film score).
Before the 15th century, music was written by hand and preserved in large bound volumes.
The first machine-printed music appeared around 1473, approximately 20 years after Gutenberg introduced the printing press. In 1501, Ottaviano Petrucci published Harmonice musices odhecaton, which contained 96 pieces of printed music. Pertucci's printing method produced clean, readable music, but it was a long, difficult process that required three separate passes through the printing press. Single impression printing first appeared in London around 1520. Pierre Attaingnant[?] brought the technique into wide use in 1528.
In 1575, Queen Elizabeth granted a monopoly on printing music to Thomas Tallis and William Byrd. This expired in 1596, when the monopoly was given to Thomas Morley[?] instead.
In the 19th century the music industry was dominated by sheet music publishers. In the United States, the group of publishers and composers dominating the industry was known as "Tin Pan Alley". In the early 20th century the phonograph and recorded music grew greatly in importance. This, joined by the growth in popularity of radio from the 1920s on, lessened the importance of the sheet music publishers. The record industry eventually replaced the sheet music publishers as the music industry's largest force.
In the late 20th and into the 21st century, significant interest developed in representing sheet music in a computer-readable format. Several systems have been developed to do this, including Finale, Sibelius, GNU LilyPond, and GUIDO.
The Mutopia project is an effort to create a library of public domain sheet music, in a way similar to Project Gutenberg's library of public domain books.
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