I use Dorico for iPad, which has a different workflow but is free for not eight staves, but eight players. And you can expand it to twelve with an account (Also for free). It took me a while to get used to it but now I’m sketching on it all the time! Unfortunately, how it treats notes differently makes transferring to musescore via musicxml very hard.
Comments
Consider that the primary function of the app is not to make music.
It looks interesting. How to do this without using an app please?
In reply to It looks interesting. How to… by BrianRiddell
Just sing. Or grab an instrument and play.
In reply to Just sing. Or grab an… by Jojo-Schmitz
Or do it on a piece of paper and a pencil. (the old-school-way)
In reply to Or do it on a piece of paper… by Pentatonus
that's making sheet music
In reply to that's making sheet music by Jojo-Schmitz
No, that's balancing.
In reply to Just sing. Or grab an… by Jojo-Schmitz
We should have a way to vote for correct answer in this forum, like StackOverflow.
@Jojo I so much want to mark your answer as the correct one :-)
Turn on the radio.
In reply to Turn on the radio. by graffesmusic
that's let music be made ;-)
In reply to that's let music be made ;-) by Jojo-Schmitz
No, that's consuming.
How to make music without the (MuseScore) app? Just use another app. ;)
I use Dorico for iPad, which has a different workflow but is free for not eight staves, but eight players. And you can expand it to twelve with an account (Also for free). It took me a while to get used to it but now I’m sketching on it all the time! Unfortunately, how it treats notes differently makes transferring to musescore via musicxml very hard.