Can I use Muse Score for Movie soundtracks and Background Scores Professionally?

• Feb 18, 2018 - 02:56

Hi Guys!

I've been using Sibelius for composing music for Full Films (Indian) that lasts 2.30 Hours (approximately) which includes Background Score and 4 to 6 songs each 5 Minutes longer (approximately).

Now I'm thinking to move from Sibelius to other applications due to annual costs of this Avid product. So I came across this muse score and interested to explore.

Would you please recommend this to fulfill my above needs? Can muse score do the above things which I have done from Sibelius?


Comments

If your computer can handle a 2.3 hour film score I think Musescore can.
What you can do with Musescore:
Create mscz files for your scores
Use the terrible soundfont FluidR3Mono or scout out on the internet for better ones
Literally thousands of instruments (most of them are woodwind), but if you don't get a different soundfont it will be using for example, a b flat clarinet sound for a contrabass clarinet
export to dozens of popular formats including PDF and flac (not mp3)
and much more

Maybe you'll think the best part of Musescore is the forum.

To answer a bit more broadly:

Yes, you can. You can in the technical sense - MuseScore is perfectly capable of creating music of any length and for any number of instruments. And you can in the legal sense - the MuseScore software and the default soundfont provided is completely free, no strings attached whatsoever.

Elsewhere on this thread you see some suggestions for alternate soundfonts which some people find better than the default (others find the default better than many of the alternatives suggested - it's really very subjective). You are welcome to search for ones that suit your needs, but note that some soundfonts are not completely - even though you can download and use them prviately for free, there are sometimes restrictions on commercial use of them. So if that is a concern, do be sure you choose appropriately. You can also use Jack to drive an external synthesizer or DAW program if you prefer getting your sounds that way.

From a practical perspective, MuseScore gets slowers to work with the larger your score is. I would not recommend creating a score for full orchestra that lasts for 2 hours. I would break it up int sections, making each a separate file. You can then export to audio format (WAV, MP3, and FLAC are all supported) and glue them together as necessary in your favorite audio / video editor.

Thank you all for the valuable comments. I think It's good to go.

Thanks to all developers and programmers who have been doing such a valuable contribution.

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