Package: fluidr3mono-gm-soundfont Version: 2.315-7~obs1804+1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Thorsten Glaser Installed-Size: 23082 Enhances: libfluidsynth1 (>= 1.1.7), libfluidsynth2, musescore (>= 2.1), musescore3 Conflicts: musescore-common (<< 2.3.2+dfsg1-1~bpo9), musescore-general-soundfont (<< 0.1.3-1~) Provides: musescore-compatible-soundfont, sf3-soundfont-gm Filename: ./all/fluidr3mono-gm-soundfont_2.315-7~obs1804+1_all.deb Size: 18727012 MD5sum: 67fc47733c4c042fa6723cbb6499cb8c SHA1: 4efbfb50ce96fe6a3a6ba8ca8044a85e81970de8 SHA256: 97342e588323f99a6c1714e1c458d0245abd89cd965b10f93287df7a1dac3bcb Section: sound Priority: optional Multi-Arch: foreign Homepage: https://musescore.org/en/node/41521 Description: Fluid (R3) Mono GM SoundFont from MuseScore 2.1 (lossy) This is the hard disc space-saving Mono version of the complete Fluid (R3) GM SoundFont in the compressed SF3 format, as shipped with MuseScore 2.0 up to, but not including, 2.2 (which switched to musescore-general-soundfont and musescore-general-soundfont-small). . It can be used with most modern MIDI synthesisers which support the SF3 format and has a low installed size footprint, while providing the large GM sound set. It does not, however, support Single-Note Dynamics with MuseScore 3.2 and higher. . As it comes under the MIT licence, it can be used in most settings, but do remember that waveforms generated using this soundfont are “copies or substantial portions of the” soundfont. It is sufficient to reproduce the licence and copyright notice in any “associated documentation files” provided with your generated waveforms. . This package will be installed into /usr/share/sounds/sf3/ which is the standard Debian location for system-wide SF3 soundfonts. Package: fonts-campania Source: campania Version: 2.009-2~obs1804+1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Thorsten Glaser Installed-Size: 255 Enhances: musescore, musescore3 Filename: ./all/fonts-campania_2.009-2~obs1804+1_all.deb Size: 123652 MD5sum: 9bd290322e15872566ca4c6fa0925a80 SHA1: 6c91154064434fbf7412bd1e6db46b80a68b54f6 SHA256: e5f6c3961965d6caf1911c864dd63d41f7963334901f42d7ad8c519ec2e06fdf Section: fonts Priority: optional Multi-Arch: foreign Homepage: https://github.com/MarcSabatella/Campania#user-content-campania Description: font for Roman numeral analysis (music theory) Campania is an OpenType font (TrueType and WOFF webfont versions are also available) for Roman numeral analysis, as used in music theory. It adds some contextual substitutions and positioning rules on top of the glyphs from Doulos (SIL) to allow you to enter the most common symbols just by typing naturally. . This font should work in any program that handles OpenType fonts reasonably. It is tested to work in MuseScore and in LibreOffice. Package: musescore Source: musescore2 Version: 2.3.2+dfsg4-15~obs1804+1 Architecture: amd64 Maintainer: Thorsten Glaser Installed-Size: 16205 Depends: libasound2 (>= 1.0.16), libc6 (>= 2.27), libfreetype6 (>= 2.2.1), libgcc1 (>= 1:3.0), libportaudio2 (>= 19+svn20101113), libportmidi0, libpulse0 (>= 0.99.1), libqt5core5a (>= 5.14.2+dfsg), libqt5gui5 (>= 5.14.2+dfsg), libqt5help5, libqt5network5 (>= 5.14.2+dfsg), libqt5printsupport5 (>= 5.14.2+dfsg), libqt5qml5 (>= 5.14.2), libqt5quick5 (>= 5.14.2), libqt5svg5, libqt5widgets5 (>= 5.14.2+dfsg), libqt5xml5 (>= 5.14.2+dfsg), libqt5xmlpatterns5 (>= 5.14.2), libsndfile1 (>= 1.0.20), libstdc++6 (>= 5.2), libvorbisfile3 (>= 1.1.2), zlib1g (>= 1:1.1.4), desktop-file-utils, fonts-freefont-ttf, qml-module-qtquick-controls, qml-module-qtquick-dialogs, qml-module-qtquick-layouts, qml-module-qtquick2, shared-mime-info, xdg-utils, musescore-common (>> 2.3~), musescore-common (<< 2.4~) Recommends: libmp3lame0 Suggests: pulseaudio-utils Provides: musescore2 Filename: ./amd64/musescore_2.3.2+dfsg4-15~obs1804+1_amd64.deb Size: 5208680 MD5sum: 95092c56e9965daba4d91e77be76b001 SHA1: 525f8629d7e7d2df786656b40f4c575c5193c9ce SHA256: 09d787283593c4b59b00650ad2c2ef43df8e28fe74355b4f8dd7efba5b083825 Section: sound Priority: optional Multi-Arch: foreign Homepage: https://musescore.org/en Description: cross-platform multi-lingual music composition and notation, v2 MuseScore is an Open Source (GNU GPL) music notation software that runs on all platforms supported by Qt5 (GNU/Linux, MacOS X, Windows), and is available in over forty different languages. It features an easy to use WYSIWYG editor with audio score playback for results that look and sound beautiful, rivaling commercial offerings like Finale and Sibelius. . This package provides MuseScore 2. You can install multiple versions of MuseScore in parallel, and upstream recommends doing so, because each major version has a new, incompatible, layout engine, and changing old scores without relayouting them fully with the new version can only be done by the old version. Install the musescore3 package for MuseScore 3 and expect a musescore4 package to show up in Debian bookworm. . Create, play back and print sheet music for free. Features include: - easy-to-use and customisable interface - albums combining multiple scores - unlimited score length - unlimited number of staves per system - up to four independent voices per staff - score creation wizard and templates - easy and fast note entry with a (PC) keyboard, the mouse, including an on-screen virtual (piano) keyboard, or MIDI (step-time, real-time) - continuous view: focus on the content, scrolling by as an endless ribbon, undistracted by line breaks or page breaks; switch to page view to polish up for printing - automatic part extraction and transposition; advanced transposition: transpose a selected passage to any key, or by any interval — or even transpose diatonically within the same key - repeats, including segnos, codas, measure repeats, advanced repeats - dynamics, articulations and other expression markings - playback support for almost all notation elements - custom text markings - style rules that apply to the whole score at once - lyrics - chord symbols - Jazz notation, including lead sheets and slash notation - swing and shuffle playback - integrated sequencer and two software synthesisers (FluidSynth for SF2/SF3, Zerberus for SFZ), which also can use third-party soundfonts - mixer for instrument levels and effects - mixing and panning for individual parts - percussion notation - early music notation - cross-staff beaming - import of graphics - custom key signatures - additive time signatures - user-defined score styles - and much more… . Choir features: - powerful lyrics copy and paste tools - implode/explode: combine up to four voices on one staff, then separate to individual staves - hide empty vocal staves, such as in a piano intro - figured bass for historical notation - smart lyrics: unlimited verses, with notes and staves automatically spaced, and verse numbers automatically aligned - voice leading checker: download the Check Harmony Rules proofreading plugin to check for errors in your part writing, according to standard rules - part mixer: mute, solo, or change volume of staves to learn individual lines — settings even apply to MP3 export . Piano features: - support for solo + piano (add small staff with different instrument) - support for cadenzas (smaller notes and variable length measures) - complete notation: pedaling, fingering, cross-staff beaming — you name it; everything needed to write piano sheet music is here . Guitar features: - bends, fingerings, and other common guitar notations supported - add/remove linked staves any time; enter notes on either standard (pitched five-line) or TAB staff - percussion/drumset also included - templates include guitar, tablature, guitar+tablature, rock/pop band - complete tablature: multiple tab styles available — from note symbols outside the staff to upside-down strings — and linked standard/tab staff pairs - Guitar Pro import: MuseScore can now open files from Guitar Pro, so you can easily migrate over. Import filters are improving with every release; GP3, GP4, GP5, GP6, GTP, GPX are currently supported. - Fretboard diagrams: 21 default chords for every key, and a powerful editor to create your own — with barre, fret position, and any number of strings - beyond guitar: banjo, mandolin, ukulele, oud; custom string tunings; even historical lute tablature: MuseScore does them all. . Orchestral features: - templates for common instrumentations - custom linked parts (e.g. create choral score from orchestra+chorus): any change you make to the content of any part is immediately reflected in the full score — and vice versa - powerful style controls: edit the formatting of parts and score independently — or apply the same style to all parts with one click - one-click transposition: instantly switch between transposed and concert pitch: sounding pitches stay the same while the written notes change . Jazz features: - templates for Jazz Lead Sheet, Big Band and Jazz Combo - real “handwritten” Book-style jazz font for text and chord symbols - formatting tools include adding line breaks every X measures - instantly switch between transposed and concert pitch - intelligent chord symbol: chord names are automatically formatted when you finish typing — plus, they transpose with the notes - easy slashes: commands to fill bars with slashes — and to turn notes into rhythmic slashes, and even accent notation above the staff . Marching ensembles features (needs the MDL extension): - marching band, indoor percussion, front ensemble, drumline and drum corps (even G bugles); no setup or configuration — select a template, start writing . Band features: - diverse templates: concert band, brass band, marching band, battery and pit percussion — ready out-of-the-box (plus big band for jazz) - custom linked parts: you can even keep a drumline score linked to a full marching band score and to individual percussion parts . Most elements in MuseScore are laid out automatically on a “virtual note sheet”, with a near professional-quality layout engine, but can also be positioned manually, giving you total control of every score element’s position. The capabilities of MuseScore can be extended via plugins and extensions, and the growing repository on musescore.org contains many plugins submitted by users and an active development team. . MuseScore includes a set of sounds that reproduce common instruments (as defined by General MIDI) without taking up a lot of disk space or memory providing full orchestral and band sounds (with the Drumline extension installed this includes marching percussion). The general (non-Drumline) sound font is available as musescore-general-soundfont Debian package, if you wish to reuse it with other synthesisers.) You can also load any sound font you prefer for a wider variety of sounds or for more realism. . MuseScore can import and export MIDI and MusicXML files, and it can also import from Capella and several other programs. MuseScore can export to PDF, PNG, and other graphic formats, to WAV and other audio formats such as OGG Vorbis and MP3, or to GNU Lilypond for an alternative layout and print option. . MuseScore can upload scores to musescore.com, a score sharing site, and send scrolling sheet music videos to YouTube. In addition to the desktop software, you can rehearse “on the go” with MuseScore mobile apps (which do not support note entry, but many advanced playback functions). Note that all of these are commercial or otherwise non-free offers optionally integrated with, but not part of, the Free notation program. Scrolling video scores feature the notes highlighted in the score as they sound — and highlighted on a virtual piano keyboard below. Package: musescore-common Source: musescore2 Version: 2.3.2+dfsg4-15~obs1804+1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Thorsten Glaser Installed-Size: 24476 Depends: musescore-general-soundfont-small | musescore-compatible-soundfont Filename: ./all/musescore-common_2.3.2+dfsg4-15~obs1804+1_all.deb Size: 3355292 MD5sum: 19bbb276e9b6034effb79b4309e40a37 SHA1: a4146b4f975f10a808bc2487f895bf5b50cfa07e SHA256: bf5ce63ec5121d697ed56dfbb1e828e7607f607ef36cc85e24185553439da306 Section: sound Priority: optional Multi-Arch: foreign Homepage: https://musescore.org/en Description: MuseScore 2 (music composition and notation) shared files Demonstration scores and templates, styles, localisations, some plugins for MuseScore, the Open Source (GNU GPL) cross-platform multi-lingual music notation software. . In contrast to earlier versions, no sound font is provided by default, but the Depends ensure a suitable one is installed, normally the compact, full orchestral and band sound, one that is shipped with MuseScore from version 2.2 onwards, or its more limited 2.1 counterpart fluidr3mono-gm-soundfont. In general, any soundfont that Provides musescore-compatible-soundfont will be acceptable; if you installed multiple, run the following command to configure the default MuseScore soundfont (select “0” to ensure that the highest-quality soundfont is used): . $ sudo update-alternatives --config MuseScore_General.sf3 Package: musescore-general-soundfont Version: 0.2.1-1~obs1804+1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Thorsten Glaser Installed-Size: 83984 Enhances: libfluidsynth1 (>= 1.1.7), libfluidsynth2, musescore (>= 2.2), musescore3 Conflicts: fluidr3mono-gm-soundfont (<< 2.315-5~), musescore-common (<< 2.3.2+dfsg1-1~bpo9) Provides: musescore-compatible-soundfont, sf3-soundfont-gm Filename: ./all/musescore-general-soundfont_0.2.1-1~obs1804+1_all.deb Size: 75771248 MD5sum: f6f51a1a15f4cd434cb71413bbffacf7 SHA1: b494e3d172702af1d67b20dc65d4f2bbf294c0c2 SHA256: e1ca698c0d88a6b111ea34f8fefa2f8714559d9e0057ff522b11453de402dd32 Section: sound Priority: optional Multi-Arch: foreign Homepage: https://musescore.org/en/node/269869 Description: General SoundFont from MuseScore (HQ version, lossy) This is the HQ version for the new standard hard disc space-saving SF3 format soundfont as shipped with MuseScore 2.2 and newer. . This release of the soundfont supports Single-Note Dynamics with MuseScore 3.2 and higher. . MuseScore_General_HQ aims at providing the best audio quality and soundfont programming features, while being a compatible drop-in replacement for the less heavyweight MuseScore_General soundfont, providing the complete GM (General MIDI) sound set, with separate ensemble samples for several instruments, and some extras. . It can be used with most modern MIDI synthesisers which support the SF3 format, although early implementations (such as the one from MuseScore before release 2.2) had bugs making the resulting sound bad; instead use fluidr3mono-gm-soundfont for those. . As it comes under the MIT licence, it can be used in most settings, but do remember that waveforms generated using this soundfont are “copies or substantial portions of the” soundfont. It is sufficient to reproduce the licence and copyright notice in any “associated documentation files” provided with your generated waveforms. . The musescore-general-soundfont-small package contains the normal soundfont (as shipped with MuseScore 3.x), lossily SF3 compressed. The musescore-general-soundfont package similarly provides the HQ version of the soundfont (with separate ensembles instruments and other large improvements) as SF3, whereas the SF2 HQ version is packaged as musescore-general-soundfont-lossless for use with synthesisers lacking SF3 support, by audiophiles, and to avoid long MuseScore startup times; however with a large disc footprint. . This package will be installed into /usr/share/sounds/sf3/ which is the standard Debian location for system-wide SF3 soundfonts. Package: musescore-general-soundfont-lossless Source: musescore-general-soundfont Version: 0.2.1-1~obs1804+1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Thorsten Glaser Installed-Size: 478098 Enhances: libfluidsynth1, libfluidsynth2, musescore, musescore3, timidity Conflicts: fluidr3mono-gm-soundfont (<< 2.315-5~), musescore-common (<< 2.3.2+dfsg1-1~bpo9), musescore-general-soundfont (<< 0.1.3-1~) Provides: musescore-compatible-soundfont, musescore-general-soundfont, sf2-soundfont-gm, sf3-soundfont-gm Filename: ./all/musescore-general-soundfont-lossless_0.2.1-1~obs1804+1_all.deb Size: 329884976 MD5sum: d69cad58c78012062b2c79a5e1282f99 SHA1: 05940e2f67866f53a9d7b890a9c60aafbbcb3011 SHA256: 9a77cc09de6a7358fee330c5e4bb31f57815c9a6396b016cb3074cbcc90deb2c Section: sound Priority: optional Multi-Arch: foreign Homepage: https://musescore.org/en/node/269869 Description: General SoundFont from MuseScore (uncompressed) This is the HQ version for the new standard soundfont of MuseScore 2.2 and newer, in uncompressed SF2 format. It has a significantly larger disc footprint than its corresponding SF3, but is identical other than not compressing the samples with a lossy algorithm. This avoids audible Vorbis artefacts and the excessively long MuseScore startup time with compressed soundfonts and can be used by SF3-incompatible synthesisers. . This release of the soundfont supports Single-Note Dynamics with MuseScore 3.2 and higher. . MuseScore_General_HQ aims at providing the best audio quality and soundfont programming features, while being a compatible drop-in replacement for the less heavyweight MuseScore_General soundfont, providing the complete GM (General MIDI) sound set, with separate ensemble samples for several instruments, and some extras. . It can be used with almost all MIDI synthesisers (with SoundFont 2.01 support) although bugs in early implementations (e.g. MuseScore before version 2.2) cause sound degradation. (Install fluidr3mono-gm-soundfont which has a compatible instrument assignment for those it supports.) . As it comes under the MIT licence, it can be used in most settings, but do remember that waveforms generated using this soundfont are “copies or substantial portions of the” soundfont. It is sufficient to reproduce the licence and copyright notice in any “associated documentation files” provided with your generated waveforms. . The musescore-general-soundfont-small package contains the normal soundfont (as shipped with MuseScore 3.x), lossily SF3 compressed. The musescore-general-soundfont package similarly provides the HQ version of the soundfont (with separate ensembles instruments and other large improvements) as SF3, whereas the SF2 HQ version is packaged as musescore-general-soundfont-lossless for use with synthesisers lacking SF3 support, by audiophiles, and to avoid long MuseScore startup times; however with a large disc footprint. . This package will be installed into /usr/share/sounds/sf2/ which is the standard Debian location for system-wide SF2 soundfonts. Package: musescore-general-soundfont-small Version: 0.2.1-1~obs1804 Architecture: all Maintainer: Thorsten Glaser Installed-Size: 39077 Enhances: libfluidsynth1 (>= 1.1.7), libfluidsynth2, musescore (>= 2.2), musescore3 Conflicts: fluidr3mono-gm-soundfont (<< 2.315-5~), musescore-common (<< 2.3.2+dfsg1-1~bpo9), musescore-general-soundfont (<< 0.1.3-1~) Provides: musescore-compatible-soundfont, musescore-general-soundfont, sf3-soundfont-gm Filename: ./all/musescore-general-soundfont-small_0.2.1-1~obs1804_all.deb Size: 34151736 MD5sum: ed7c0e8cdbc7cce5dcf2a3d1bf5bdfd9 SHA1: b4d30c5a6789590165e51903d3a4793378341c1e SHA256: 488d46363e42c9dfb87181303561fe4ebc2c3794eb03812f83ada2b4e3d593b9 Section: sound Priority: optional Multi-Arch: foreign Homepage: https://musescore.org/en/node/269869 Description: General SoundFont from MuseScore (lossy) This is the new standard hard disc space-saving SF3 format soundfont as shipped with MuseScore 2.2 and newer. . This release of the soundfont supports Single-Note Dynamics with MuseScore 3.2 and higher. . MuseScore_General attempts to keep the installed-size footprint low while providing the complete GM (General MIDI) sound set and some extras; were it not for the new pianos, it would even be smaller than its antecessor fluidr3mono-gm-soundfont despite restoring stereo samples for some instruments and the new focus on quality, thanks to numerous optimisations and bugfixes. . It can be used with most modern MIDI synthesisers which support the SF3 format, although early implementations (such as the one from MuseScore before release 2.2) had bugs making the resulting sound bad; instead use fluidr3mono-gm-soundfont for those. . As it comes under the MIT licence, it can be used in most settings, but do remember that waveforms generated using this soundfont are “copies or substantial portions of the” soundfont. It is sufficient to reproduce the licence and copyright notice in any “associated documentation files” provided with your generated waveforms. . The musescore-general-soundfont-small package contains the normal soundfont (as shipped with MuseScore 3.x), lossily SF3 compressed. The musescore-general-soundfont package similarly provides the HQ version of the soundfont (with separate ensembles instruments and other large improvements) as SF3, whereas the SF2 HQ version is packaged as musescore-general-soundfont-lossless for use with synthesisers lacking SF3 support, by audiophiles, and to avoid long MuseScore startup times; however with a large disc footprint. . This package will be installed into /usr/share/sounds/sf3/ which is the standard Debian location for system-wide SF3 soundfonts. Package: musescore-snapshot Version: 3.2.s20190704+dfsg1-1~obs+1 Architecture: amd64 Maintainer: Thorsten Glaser Installed-Size: 27159 Depends: desktop-file-utils, libqt5sql5-sqlite, musescore-snapshot-common (>> 3.2~), musescore-snapshot-common (<< 3.3~), qml-module-qtquick-controls, qml-module-qtquick-dialogs, qml-module-qtquick-layouts, qml-module-qtquick2, shared-mime-info, xdg-utils, libasound2 (>= 1.0.16), libc6 (>= 2.27), libfreetype6 (>= 2.2.1), libgcc1 (>= 1:3.0), libpoppler-qt5-1, libportaudio2 (>= 19+svn20101113), libportmidi0, libpulse0 (>= 0.99.1), libqt5core5a (>= 5.13.2+dfsg), libqt5gui5 (>= 5.13.2+dfsg), libqt5help5, libqt5network5 (>= 5.13.2+dfsg), libqt5printsupport5 (>= 5.13.2+dfsg), libqt5qml5 (>= 5.13.2), libqt5quick5 (>= 5.13.2), libqt5svg5, libqt5widgets5 (>= 5.13.2+dfsg), libqt5xml5 (>= 5.13.2+dfsg), libqt5xmlpatterns5 (>= 5.13.2), libsndfile1 (>= 1.0.20), libstdc++6 (>= 5.2), libvorbisfile3 (>= 1.1.2), zlib1g (>= 1:1.1.4) Recommends: libmp3lame0, pulseaudio-utils Filename: ./amd64/musescore-snapshot_3.2.s20190704+dfsg1-1~obs+1_amd64.deb Size: 10266212 MD5sum: 03f8daee16b87219704b634cbdc9a238 SHA1: a14ea404efeebab88173fc1495f26f8443c56010 SHA256: ca723c1c196d1bc03ddcacea31850f6d6f0b8c501eca7d0a95d9ee8bec9b95ed Section: sound Priority: optional Multi-Arch: foreign Homepage: https://musescore.org/en Description: cross-platform multi-lingual music composition and notation (devel) MuseScore is an Open Source (GNU GPL) music notation software that runs on all platforms supported by Qt5 (GNU/Linux, MacOS X, Windows), and is available in over forty different languages. It features an easy to use WYSIWYG editor with audio score playback for results that look and sound beautiful, rivaling commercial offerings like Finale and Sibelius. . Create, play back and print sheet music for free. Features include: - easy-to-use and customisable interface - optional dark theme (to focus on the score) - tours for first-time and returning users - albums combining multiple scores - unlimited score length - unlimited number of staves per system - up to four independent voices per staff - score creation wizard and templates - easy and fast note entry with a (PC) keyboard, the mouse, including an on-screen virtual (piano) keyboard, or MIDI (step-time, real-time) - timewise input (moving subsequent notes/rests), also for unmetered music - half-time and double-time paste commands for copy/paste - continuous view: focus on the content, scrolling by as an endless ribbon, undistracted by line breaks or page breaks; switch to page view to polish up for printing - timeline view - automatic part extraction (by staves or voices) and transposition - advanced transposition: transpose a selected passage to any key, or by any interval — or even transpose diatonically within the same key - repeats, including segnos, codas, measure repeats, advanced repeats; linearisation command to expand repeats - dynamics, articulations and other expression markings - playback support for almost all notation elements - custom text markings - style rules that apply to the whole score at once - automatic placement system (smart layout), now even more flexible - lyrics - chord symbols - Jazz notation, including lead sheets and slash notation - swing and shuffle playback - integrated sequencer and two software synthesisers (FluidSynth for SF2/SF3, Zerberus for SFZ), which also can use third-party soundfonts - single-note dynamics - mixer for instrument levels and effects - mixing and panning for individual parts - percussion notation - early music notation - cross-staff beaming - import of graphics - custom key signatures - additive time signatures - system dividers - user-defined score styles - cutaway staves - pianoroll editor, edit playback parameters of each note individually - score comparison tool - and much more… . Choir features: - powerful lyrics copy and paste tools - implode/explode: combine up to four voices on one staff, then separate to individual staves - hide empty vocal staves, such as in a piano intro - figured bass for historical notation - smart lyrics: unlimited verses, with notes and staves automatically spaced, and verse numbers automatically aligned - voice leading checker: download the Check Harmony Rules proofreading plugin to check for errors in your part writing, according to standard rules - part mixer: mute, solo, or change volume of staves to learn individual lines — settings even apply to MP3 export . Piano features: - support for solo + piano (add small staff with different instrument) - support for cadenzas (smaller notes and variable length measures) - complete notation: pedaling, fingering, cross-staff beaming — you name it; everything needed to write piano sheet music is here . Guitar features: - bends, fingerings, and other common guitar notations supported - add/remove linked staves any time; enter notes on either standard (pitched five-line) or TAB staff - percussion/drumset also included - templates include guitar, tablature, guitar+tablature, rock/pop band - complete tablature: multiple tab styles available — from note symbols outside the staff to upside-down strings — and linked standard/tab staff pairs - Guitar Pro import: MuseScore can now open files from Guitar Pro, so you can easily migrate over. Import filters are improving with every release; GP3, GP4, GP5, GP6, GTP, GPX are currently supported. - Fretboard diagrams: 21 default chords for every key, and a powerful editor to create your own — with barre, fret position, and any number of strings - multiple or differently shaped dots per string; partial and multiple barres; ability to not show nut; customisable string/fret distance; chord symbols for diagrams and saving those to the palette; etc. - beyond guitar: banjo, mandolin, ukulele, oud; custom string tunings; even historical lute tablature: MuseScore does them all. . Orchestral features: - templates for common instrumentations - custom linked parts (e.g. create choral score from orchestra+chorus): any change you make to the content of any part is immediately reflected in the full score — and vice versa - powerful style controls: edit the formatting of parts and score independently — or apply the same style to all parts with one click - one-click transposition: instantly switch between transposed and concert pitch: sounding pitches stay the same while the written notes change . Jazz features: - templates for Jazz Lead Sheet, Big Band and Jazz Combo - real “handwritten” Book-style jazz font for text and chord symbols - formatting tools include adding line breaks every X measures - instantly switch between transposed and concert pitch - intelligent chord symbol: chord names are automatically formatted when you finish typing — plus, they transpose with the notes - easy slashes: commands to fill bars with slashes — and to turn notes into rhythmic slashes, and even accent notation above the staff . Marching ensembles features (needs the MDL extension): - marching band, indoor percussion, front ensemble, drumline and drum corps (even G bugles); no setup or configuration — select a template, start writing . Band features: - diverse templates: concert band, brass band, marching band, battery and pit percussion — ready out-of-the-box (plus big band for jazz) - custom linked parts: you can even keep a drumline score linked to a full marching band score and to individual percussion parts . Most elements in MuseScore are laid out automatically on a “virtual note sheet”, with a near professional-quality layout engine, but can also be positioned manually, giving you total control of every score element’s position. The capabilities of MuseScore can be extended via plugins and extensions, and the growing repository on musescore.org contains many plugins submitted by users and an active development team. . MuseScore includes a set of sounds that reproduce common instruments (as defined by General MIDI) without taking up a lot of disk space or memory providing full orchestral and band sounds (with the Drumline extension installed this includes marching percussion). The general (non-Drumline) sound font is available as musescore-general-soundfont Debian package, if you wish to reuse it with other synthesisers.) You can also load any sound font you prefer for a wider variety of sounds or for more realism. . MuseScore can import and export MIDI and MusicXML files, and it can also import from Capella and several other programs. MuseScore can export to PDF, PNG, and other graphic formats, to WAV and other audio formats such as OGG Vorbis and MP3, or to GNU Lilypond for an alternative layout and print option. . MuseScore can upload scores to musescore.com, a score sharing site, and send scrolling sheet music videos to YouTube. In addition to the desktop software, you can rehearse “on the go” with MuseScore mobile apps (which do not support note entry, but many advanced playback functions). Note that all of these are commercial or otherwise non-free offers optionally integrated with, but not part of, the Free notation program. Scrolling video scores feature the notes highlighted in the score as they sound — and highlighted on a virtual piano keyboard below. . This package corresponds to a build of a random upstream git master snapshot and is NOT a guaranteed usable / stable release! Package: musescore-snapshot-common Source: musescore-snapshot Version: 3.2.s20190704+dfsg1-1~obs+1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Thorsten Glaser Installed-Size: 31642 Depends: musescore-general-soundfont-small | musescore-compatible-soundfont Filename: ./all/musescore-snapshot-common_3.2.s20190704+dfsg1-1~obs+1_all.deb Size: 3757588 MD5sum: 377e3ec30f3ed6906acbef49a2e23c56 SHA1: 06f9f0c6a2ca98ab800d7a6661b25a69db4076a0 SHA256: 40a5c4011770ad758762199cbd4049caa58174079e2a507e429a56bcdb9f26ac Section: sound Priority: optional Multi-Arch: foreign Homepage: https://musescore.org/en Description: MuseScore devel (music composition and notation) shared files Demonstration scores and templates, styles, localisations, some plugins for MuseScore, the Open Source (GNU GPL) cross-platform multi-lingual music notation software. . In contrast to earlier versions, no sound font is provided by default, but the Depends ensure a suitable one is installed, normally the compact, full orchestral and band sound, one that is shipped with MuseScore from version 2.2 onwards, or its more limited 2.1 counterpart fluidr3mono-gm-soundfont. . This package corresponds to a build of a random upstream git master snapshot and is NOT a guaranteed usable / stable release! Package: musescore3 Version: 3.2.3+dfsg2-16~obs1804+1 Architecture: amd64 Maintainer: Thorsten Glaser Installed-Size: 19610 Depends: libasound2 (>= 1.0.16), libc6 (>= 2.27), libfreetype6 (>= 2.2.1), libgcc1 (>= 1:3.0), libpoppler-qt5-1, libportaudio2 (>= 19+svn20101113), libportmidi0, libpulse0 (>= 0.99.1), libqt5core5a (>= 5.14.2+dfsg), libqt5gui5 (>= 5.14.2+dfsg), libqt5help5, libqt5network5 (>= 5.14.2+dfsg), libqt5printsupport5 (>= 5.14.2+dfsg), libqt5qml5 (>= 5.14.2), libqt5quick5 (>= 5.14.2), libqt5svg5, libqt5widgets5 (>= 5.14.2+dfsg), libqt5xml5 (>= 5.14.2+dfsg), libqt5xmlpatterns5 (>= 5.14.2), libsndfile1 (>= 1.0.20), libstdc++6 (>= 5.2), libvorbisfile3 (>= 1.1.2), zlib1g (>= 1:1.1.4), desktop-file-utils, fonts-freefont-ttf, qml-module-qtquick-controls, qml-module-qtquick-dialogs, qml-module-qtquick-layouts, qml-module-qtquick2, shared-mime-info, xdg-utils, musescore3-common (>> 3.2~), musescore3-common (<< 3.3~) Recommends: libmp3lame0 Suggests: pulseaudio-utils Filename: ./amd64/musescore3_3.2.3+dfsg2-16~obs1804+1_amd64.deb Size: 7291856 MD5sum: 745558ebadc86d09751931491c669075 SHA1: 414a53958c158ca185c2dea59ef4f38262e3b82c SHA256: 2f5793c16369cc83596ba7069db600232b903564c0f8146d077e9acb852c2fc4 Section: sound Priority: optional Multi-Arch: foreign Homepage: https://musescore.org/en Description: cross-platform multi-lingual music composition and notation, v3 MuseScore is an Open Source (GNU GPL) music notation software that runs on all platforms supported by Qt5 (GNU/Linux, MacOS X, Windows), and is available in over forty different languages. It features an easy to use WYSIWYG editor with audio score playback for results that look and sound beautiful, rivaling commercial offerings like Finale and Sibelius. . This package provides MuseScore 3. You can install multiple versions of MuseScore in parallel, and upstream recommends doing so, because each major version has a new, incompatible, layout engine, and changing old scores without relayouting them fully with the new version can only be done by the old version. For MuseScore 2, install the musescore package, and expect a musescore4 package to show up in Debian bookworm. . Create, play back and print sheet music for free. Features include: - easy-to-use and customisable interface - optional dark theme (to focus on the score) - tours for first-time and returning users - albums combining multiple scores - unlimited score length - unlimited number of staves per system - up to four independent voices per staff - score creation wizard and templates - easy and fast note entry with a (PC) keyboard, the mouse, including an on-screen virtual (piano) keyboard, or MIDI (step-time, real-time) - timewise input (moving subsequent notes/rests), also for unmetered music - half-time and double-time paste commands for copy/paste - continuous view: focus on the content, scrolling by as an endless ribbon, undistracted by line breaks or page breaks; switch to page view to polish up for printing - timeline view - automatic part extraction (by staves or voices) and transposition - advanced transposition: transpose a selected passage to any key, or by any interval — or even transpose diatonically within the same key - repeats, including segnos, codas, measure repeats, advanced repeats; linearisation command to expand repeats - dynamics, articulations and other expression markings - playback support for almost all notation elements - custom text markings - style rules that apply to the whole score at once - automatic placement system (smart layout), now even more flexible - lyrics - chord symbols - Jazz notation, including lead sheets and slash notation - swing and shuffle playback - integrated sequencer and two software synthesisers (FluidSynth for SF2/SF3, Zerberus for SFZ), which also can use third-party soundfonts - single-note dynamics - mixer for instrument levels and effects - mixing and panning for individual parts - percussion notation - sticking (“fingering” for drummers) - early music notation - cross-staff beaming - import of graphics - custom key signatures - additive time signatures - system dividers - user-defined score styles - cutaway staves - pianoroll editor, edit playback parameters of each note individually - score comparison tool - and much more… . Choir features: - powerful lyrics copy and paste tools - implode/explode: combine up to four voices on one staff, then separate to individual staves - hide empty vocal staves, such as in a piano intro - figured bass for historical notation - smart lyrics: unlimited verses, with notes and staves automatically spaced, and verse numbers automatically aligned - voice leading checker: download the Check Harmony Rules proofreading plugin to check for errors in your part writing, according to standard rules - part mixer: mute, solo, or change volume of staves to learn individual lines — settings even apply to MP3 export . Piano features: - support for solo + piano (add small staff with different instrument) - support for cadenzas (smaller notes and variable length measures) - complete notation: pedaling, fingering, cross-staff beaming — you name it; everything needed to write piano sheet music is here . Guitar features: - bends, fingerings, and other common guitar notations supported - add/remove linked staves any time; enter notes on either standard (pitched five-line) or TAB staff - percussion/drumset also included - templates include guitar, tablature, guitar+tablature, rock/pop band - complete tablature: multiple tab styles available — from note symbols outside the staff to upside-down strings — and linked standard/tab staff pairs - Guitar Pro import: MuseScore can now open files from Guitar Pro, so you can easily migrate over. Import filters are improving with every release; GP3, GP4, GP5, GP6, GTP, GPX are currently supported. - Fretboard diagrams: 21 default chords for every key, and a powerful editor to create your own — with barre, fret position, and any number of strings - multiple or differently shaped dots per string; partial and multiple barres; ability to not show nut; customisable string/fret distance; chord symbols for diagrams and saving those to the palette; etc. - beyond guitar: banjo, mandolin, ukulele, oud; custom string tunings; even historical lute tablature: MuseScore does them all. . Orchestral features: - templates for common instrumentations - custom linked parts (e.g. create choral score from orchestra+chorus): any change you make to the content of any part is immediately reflected in the full score — and vice versa - powerful style controls: edit the formatting of parts and score independently — or apply the same style to all parts with one click - one-click transposition: instantly switch between transposed and concert pitch: sounding pitches stay the same while the written notes change . Jazz features: - templates for Jazz Lead Sheet, Big Band and Jazz Combo - real “handwritten” Book-style jazz font for text and chord symbols - formatting tools include adding line breaks every X measures - instantly switch between transposed and concert pitch - intelligent chord symbol: chord names are automatically formatted when you finish typing — plus, they transpose with the notes - easy slashes: commands to fill bars with slashes — and to turn notes into rhythmic slashes, and even accent notation above the staff . Marching ensembles features (needs the MDL extension): - marching band, indoor percussion, front ensemble, drumline and drum corps (even G bugles); no setup or configuration — select a template, start writing . Band features: - diverse templates: concert band, brass band, marching band, battery and pit percussion — ready out-of-the-box (plus big band for jazz) - custom linked parts: you can even keep a drumline score linked to a full marching band score and to individual percussion parts . Most elements in MuseScore are laid out automatically on a “virtual note sheet”, with a near professional-quality layout engine, but can also be positioned manually, giving you total control of every score element’s position. The capabilities of MuseScore can be extended via plugins and extensions, and the growing repository on musescore.org contains many plugins submitted by users and an active development team. . MuseScore includes a set of sounds that reproduce common instruments (as defined by General MIDI) without taking up a lot of disk space or memory providing full orchestral and band sounds (with the Drumline extension installed this includes marching percussion). The general (non-Drumline) sound font is available as musescore-general-soundfont Debian package, if you wish to reuse it with other synthesisers.) You can also load any sound font you prefer for a wider variety of sounds or for more realism. . MuseScore can import and export MIDI and MusicXML files, and it can also import from Capella and several other programs. MuseScore can export to PDF, PNG, and other graphic formats, to WAV and other audio formats such as OGG Vorbis and MP3, or to GNU Lilypond for an alternative layout and print option. . MuseScore can upload scores to musescore.com, a score sharing site, and send scrolling sheet music videos to YouTube. In addition to the desktop software, you can rehearse “on the go” with MuseScore mobile apps (which do not support note entry, but many advanced playback functions). Note that all of these are commercial or otherwise non-free offers optionally integrated with, but not part of, the Free notation program. Scrolling video scores feature the notes highlighted in the score as they sound — and highlighted on a virtual piano keyboard below. Package: musescore3-common Source: musescore3 Version: 3.2.3+dfsg2-16~obs1804+1 Architecture: all Maintainer: Thorsten Glaser Installed-Size: 32114 Depends: musescore-general-soundfont-small | musescore-compatible-soundfont Filename: ./all/musescore3-common_3.2.3+dfsg2-16~obs1804+1_all.deb Size: 3825132 MD5sum: 4289e0ff068de98ed36d014946bd1c52 SHA1: 38d4805bd622ededd16d67005f32a14473a92f8a SHA256: d2c5d0bef15052f74ba5f0d6f15a1327de2e4b4c38dbf0918834749602aea869 Section: sound Priority: optional Multi-Arch: foreign Homepage: https://musescore.org/en Description: MuseScore 3 (music composition and notation) shared files Demonstration scores and templates, styles, localisations, some plugins for MuseScore, the Open Source (GNU GPL) cross-platform multi-lingual music notation software. . In contrast to earlier versions, no sound font is provided by default, but the Depends ensure a suitable one is installed, normally the compact, full orchestral and band sound, one that is shipped with MuseScore from version 2.2 onwards, or its more limited 2.1 counterpart fluidr3mono-gm-soundfont. In general, any soundfont that Provides musescore-compatible-soundfont will be acceptable; if you installed multiple, run the following command to configure the default MuseScore soundfont (select “0” to ensure that the highest-quality soundfont is used): . $ sudo update-alternatives --config MuseScore_General.sf3