New to this, can someone please help me! Only have audio and need accompaniment.

• Jan 13, 2017 - 07:05

Hi there! I am doing my Masters degree in Vocal Performance and there is a particular Baroque aria that I am wanting to sing in an audition/school setting. On imslp and the rest of the internet, I only find the antique version and manuscript that an accompanist will have a hard time reading (with open score, figured bass, and antique music notation). I'm wondering if I can input the aria (audio) somehow into MuseScore and simply have it notate the accompaniment for me? I know this is a long shot, but I don't really know what else to do. Aside from just listening and notating it myself (I work and go to school and teach all day long so I'm strapped for time!!) or paying someone to do it for me, I don't know how else to get this aria to sing in public. Thank you!

PS- brand new to this website and software. I'm wondering if this is something MuseScore is capable of.


Comments

Turning audio to sheet music to arrangement will not work well (if at all) and it will destroy your performance I'm afraid.
The only solution is to check online (maybe on https://musescore.com) if someone didn't do an arrangement of this particular Aria (which one btw?). And if it's not available, I'm afraid you will have to pay someone to do a modern transcription.

No; (in this particular case) software not helping you, Only humans do.

If you have this aria's vocal part and accompanist's notations (Antic or modern or cipher or numbered notation) put to link here please.

May be someone find a way to help you.

Great! Thank you both so much. The aria is from Marc Antoine Charpentier's opera Médée. Opera premiered in 1693 in Paris. Here is the YouTube link: https://youtu.be/609Byx20oi8.

I don't mind paying someone to transcribe yet for me; I just want it to be right and already realized so my accompanist will not have to realize upon sight in an audition situation. More and more accompanists are unable to do this unless they specialize in Baroque rep. I also want it to be as close to the orchestral voicings and "sound" as possible. If someone in here can do it, I will certainly pay, and don't worry about the French text. As long as the accompaniment is written with the melody, I can go back and put words in.

Take a listen and tell me what y'all think. Thank you so much for responding!

In reply to by Jojo-Schmitz

Hi, when the opera was performed it may have been performed by musicians on period instruments who understood Baroque music notation. The opera was probably performed with orchestra and I'm looking for a piano reduction only.

The score is on Imslp, but as I stated in my opening query, it is antique and no accompanist would be able to read that in an audition situation or in a rehearsal situation. Even Baroque specialists would most likely have difficulty.

http://ks.imslp.info/files/imglnks/usimg/7/7c/IMSLP321529-PMLP294245-Ch…

This link above is to the clearest score on imslp. For anyone wanting to take a look at it, scroll to page 94 on the actual music. The aria begins at "Scene Seconde" in Act 2 with the word "Princeffe" (That's princess,)

Thanks!

I wish I had the time to do this as it would make a very nice small ensemble piece. Why not give it a go? You will learn more about the piece from doing this. This may be old but the engraving is quite superb for the time.

I'd start by just getting the notes down - you will need to ensure you use the correct clefs and you will have a rapid learning experience of old-style music notation but if you have a good ear you can hear that you are entering the correct notes most of the time. Then listen to it to ensure that playback is correct (there are bound to be errors that need corrected). Next change things to modern clefs (this is easy - just drag the correct clef to the beginning of the stave). Then start putting notes into the piano treble stave and then into the bass stave. You can't put all the notes into a piano reduction but can try to capture the essence for accompaniment - you might ask your accompanist (or any pianist you know) to help you with this part.

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