sheet-music-formats
Revision as of 09:35, 21 March 2012 by Barnabywalters (talk | contribs) (→Semantic Formats: Added MusicXML, spec and wild listing)
Current Sheet MusicFormats
There are various different ways to represent a piece of Sheet Music on the web.
This page serves to document the current list of sheet music formats and metadata as background research for the development of a sheet music microformat. -Barnaby Walters
Contributors
Templated off review-formats.
- Barnaby Walters
See Also
Widely Used Formats
Semantic Formats
ABC
A text based notation format originally designed for the notation of traditional music. It has become extremely widespread.
- http://abcnotation.com/wiki/abc:standard:v2.1
- More Reference: http://abcnotation.com/learn
- Data Stored
- Actual Tune
- ID (X:, only relevant when the tune is stored as part of a multi-tune book)
- Title (T:)
- Composer (C:)
- Various Musical Attributes
- Key
- Meter
- Default Note Length
- Tempo
- Parts
- Rhythm (e.g. a tune in 3/4 can be played with various different rhythms)
- Other Metadata
- Book
- Area of Origin
- Notes
- Transcriptor
- Groups
- History
- Deployed in the Wild
- The Session — Huge repo of trad. Irish (+ all gaelic, some English) traditional music. Served as ABC and PNG
- ABC Notation Website
- List of other websites serving ABC tunes — Huge list of other abc sites
- Web-wide abc tune search
- WPC Gurdy Sheet Music Database — Barnaby Walters' hurdy gurdy sheet music DB.
MusicXML
An XML based notation format
- Spec: http://www.makemusic.com/musicxml/specification
- More Reference: http://www.makemusic.com/musicxml
- Data Stored
- Deployed in the Wild
- http://www.makemusic.com/musicxml/music — List of MusicXML repos on the web
Non-Semantic Formats
These are the formats that would benefit most from a microformat — giving them the same metadata that can be found in more semantic notation formats.
Tunes are commonly stored as PDFs.
- Examples in the Wild
- Free Sheet Music.net — vast amounts of sheet music locked up in .pdf format
Images
Tunes are commonly stored as images
- Examples in the wild