


If you place a half note in a bar by itself in 4/4 time the system simply skips the missing two beats and continues on to the next note. They have no effect on music playback, the system simply plays the notes in the order in which they are placed on the staff. The same goes for bar lines, they must be manually moved left and right as needed. When you place a note in a measure it stays there and does not automatically adjust when other notes are placed around it. At first I thought the program was limited to only using treble clef and 4/4 but then realized that you can change these things by hovering over them instead of looking for their controls in a menu.Ĭrescendo allows for multiple parts and multiple lines in a single system, but all note arrangement and staff alignment is done manually.

When you start to use it though you see that although it does not have the feature sets of the commercial programs Crescendo does make the idea of dragging and dropping notes to create music very easy and intuitive.

At first glance it reminds me a lot of PyWare's Music Writer Touch program simply because of the layout and style of the tool palette. To top it all of it is also free!Ĭrescendo is a free music notation program for the PC. It doesn't have a lot of bells and whistles but it does what it says it should, and it works great on interactive whiteboards or Windows based tablets. The wide array of sheet music symbols, time and key signatures, along with a free-form layout, gives a composer optimum control over creating sheet music for their arrangements.For those who are looking for a very simple, barebones music notation program Crescendo from NCH Software might just be what you need. A simple and intuitive way to write musical notation, Crescendo allows composers to write, save and print their music compositions on their computer.
