Sibelius (software)

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Sibelius
Sibelius logo.png
Sibelius-6.png
Sibelius 6, running on Mac OS X.
Developer(s) Sibelius Software
Initial release 1993
Stable release 7.1.0 / 19 December 2011
Operating system Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows
License Proprietary
Website www.sibelius.com

Sibelius is a scorewriter program, created by Sibelius Software (now part of Avid Technology) for Microsoft Windows, Mac OS, and RISC OS. It is used by composers, arrangers, performers, music publishers, teachers and students, particularly for writing classical, jazz, band, vocal, film and television music. In addition to editing and printing scores, Sibelius can also play music back using high-quality sounds, scan and import printed scores for editing, and publish scores for others to access via the Internet and iPads.

Sibelius claims to be the world's best-selling scorewriter, with "hundreds of thousands of users in 100 countries".[1]

'Lite' versions of Sibelius (with fewer features, at a lower price) have been released, as have various add-ons for the software.

Contents

[edit] History

Sibelius was originally developed by British twins Ben and Jonathan Finn for the Acorn Archimedes computer, under the name 'Sibelius 7'. Development (done on RISC OS entirely in assembly language) was started in 1986, just after the Finns left school, continuing while they were at university. They were music students, and they said they wrote the program because they did not like the laborious process of writing music by hand.

The program was released to the public in April 1993. It ran off a 3.5-inch floppy disk, in considerably less than 1MB of memory (Sibelius 7 needed only 548K for a 33-page symphonic score, for example), but the combination of assembly language and Acorn's RISC chip, for which RISC OS was written, meant that it ran very fast. No matter how long the score, changes were displayed virtually instantaneously.

The first ever user of Sibelius was Richard Emsley, who used it prior to its release and provided advice on music-engraving aspects of the software. The first score published using Sibelius was Antara by George Benjamin, published by Faber Music and copied by Emsley. Other early users included composer John Rutter, conductor Michael Tilson Thomas and publisher Music Sales.

Sibelius rapidly dominated the UK market, being a killer application for the niche Acorn platform.[2] It also sold in smaller numbers in a few other countries, restricted by the availability of Acorn computers. 'Lite' versions were subsequently released; these were successful in UK schools, where Acorns were widely used.

In September 1998, the first version for Windows was released (now simply called 'Sibelius', and with the version number reset to 1.0).[3] A Mac version was released a few months later. To produce these versions the software was completely rewritten in C++, while retaining most of the original's functionality and user interface with numerous enhancements.

Releasing Sibelius for more widely available computers brought it to a worldwide market, particularly the US, where Sibelius Software had opened an office in late 1996. Following the break-up of Acorn Computers shortly after Sibelius's Windows release, no further Acorn versions were developed.

In August 2006, Sibelius Software Ltd. was acquired by Avid Technology, an American manufacturer of software and hardware for audio and video production. Avid has continued publishing Sibelius as a stand-alone notation product, as well as integrating it with some of its existing software products.

[edit] Windows and Mac version history

  • Sibelius (i.e. Sibelius 1.0 in September 1998 for Windows, Sibelius 1.2 in March 1999 for Mac). Thereafter major new versions have been released for both platforms approximately every 2 years, with minor versions more frequently:
  • Sibelius 2 (in 2001), with numerous new features.
  • Sibelius 3 (in 2003), with new features such as Kontakt Player and the ability to create audio files and CDs.
  • Sibelius 4 (July 2005), with new features such as the ability to write music synchronized to video, instrumental parts which are automatically updated when the score is changes, and a redesigned user interface.
  • Sibelius 5 (June 2007), with support for VST effects and instruments, a new sample library (Sibelius Sounds Essentials), 'Panorama' view, and other new features.
  • Sibelius 6 (May 2009), featuring 'Magnetic Layout' (comprehensive score object positioning and collision avoidance), 'Versions' (revision control of changes made to a score), keyboard and fretboard windows, Live Tempo (recordable tempo changes), ReWire support, input via microphone, and various other notation and playback enhancements.
  • Sibelius 7 (July 2011), with a new ribbon-based user interface,[4] native 64-bit support, a 38GB professional sound library including specialized playing techniques, advanced text and typographic handling, enhanced graphics import/export, MusicXML export (MusicXML version 2, not fully implemented – importing MusicXML has been possible since Sibelius 5), Finale-compatible note input, and various other improvements. This version of Sibelius (and all future versions) is no longer supported on Windows XP, Mac OS X v10.5 or earlier, and Mac computers with PowerPC processors. The last version with support is Sibelius 6.2.[5]

[edit] Features

Sibelius's primary function is the creation, editing and printing of musical scores. It supports virtually all music notations, enabling even the most complex of scores (such as modern orchestral music) to be reproduced to publication quality.

Additionally, it allows scores to be played back realistically or turned into MIDI or audio files, e.g. to create a CD. A large range of high-quality sampled sounds and built-in sample player are included. Sibelius supports any MIDI device, and allows VST and Audio Unit plug-ins to be used as playback instruments, giving Sibelius users access to third-party sample libraries (such as Vienna Symphonic Library or MOTU's Symphonic Instrument).[6] Score playback can also be synchronized to video, or to audio software via the ReWire standard.

There are various education-specific features for Sibelius's large market of schools and universities. These include extensive built-in music teaching materials, and the ability to run and manage multiple copies of the software on a network. Discounted educational pricing is available.

The third-party program PhotoScore can be used to scan and create a Sibelius score from printed music; a lite version of PhotoScore is bundled with the Sibelius software. Similarly, the third-party program AudioScore (with bundled lite version) can be used to turn singing or an acoustic instrument into a score.[7]

The program plays a brief passage from a Jean Sibelius symphony as it starts. Each Sibelius version has used a different excerpt. The current version, Sibelius 7, appropriately uses the main theme from Sibelius's 7th Symphony.

[edit] Internet publishing

Sibelius users can publish their scores from the software via the Internet or iPads. Anyone else using software called Scorch (free for web browsers, charged for on iPads) can then view these scores, play them back, transpose them, change instruments, and print them out (web browser version only). The iPad version of Scorch also includes a store containing over 250,000 scores from publishers Music Sales, Hal Leonard, and ScoreExchange.com (see below).

Scorch is used by various music publishers' web sites, and web sites of individual musicians. Publishers can license a special version of Sibelius, Sibelius Internet Edition, for commercial online publishing.

ScoreExchange.com (previously SibeliusMusic.com) is a web site where any Sibelius user can upload scores they have composed, arranged or transcribed with Sibelius, so that anyone can access the music using Scorch. Some scores are sold, others are free. SibeliusMusic began in 2001, and by June 2011 had nearly 100,000 scores.

[edit] Language versions

Versions of Sibelius are available in English, German, French, Spanish, Italian, Japanese and Chinese. Manuals have been released for various further languages.

[edit] Lite versions

'Lite' versions of Sibelius (with a smaller feature set and lower price) were released for Acorn computers from late 1993 onwards (Sibelius 7 Student, Sibelius 6 and Junior Sibelius) and more recently for Windows and Mac platforms (Sibelius Student, Sibelius Instrumental Teacher Edition and Sibelius First). A Sibelius version for guitarists and songwriters called G7 was also available for several years.

Sibelius Student is now updated in step with new versions of the full Sibelius program, but only with some of the new features.

[edit] Add-ons

Add-ons for Sibelius which are currently or have previously been available include extra sound libraries, extra plug-in features (which are free of charge, and often created by Sibelius users), full versions of the PhotoScore (scanning) and AudioScore (microphone input) software, keyboards and keyboard covers showing shortcuts, and Sibelius-branded merchandise.

A range of software for teachers and students from the same company, Sibelius Educational Suite, is not directly connected with the Sibelius program, but is often used by the same people.

[edit] Users

Sibelius is used by professionals and amateurs for composing, arranging and writing out music, in addition to being widely used as an educational tool.[citation needed]

The software is used at music colleges worldwide such as the Royal Northern College of Music, Royal Academy of Music, Guildhall School of Music and Drama, Royal College of Music, Trinity College of Music, Juilliard School of Music, Berklee College of Music, Oxford University and Cambridge University.[citation needed] Additionally it is used by thousands of schools in the UK, USA, Australia and other countries, including over 75% of UK secondary schools.[citation needed]

[edit] Name

Ben and Jonathan Finn, the twin brothers who wrote the first versions of the software for the Acorn machines, said they chose Sibelius as the name of the software and the company because the Finnish composer Jean Sibelius was their favorite composer. There is also an obvious punning reference, because of the coincidence of their surname and Sibelius' nationality.

The full, top-end Acorn version of the software was called Sibelius 7, but the '7' was not so much a version number. There was also a reduced version called Sibelius 7 Student, which had slightly reduced functionality, and was upgradable to the full version. There was a lite version, Sibelius 6.

The '7' associated with the top-end Acorn version also referred to the fact that Sibelius the composer wrote only seven symphonies, so number 7 was his crowning work, as was the '7' version of the software.

For the Windows and Mac versions the company began using conventional version numbers, starting with version 1. The original Acorn names Sibelius 6 and Sibelius 7 have since been re-used to denote versions 6 and 7 of Sibelius for Windows/Mac.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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