![]() Mozart's Piano Concerto 21 into Sib - announce it, and we start a "engraving hub". Given that sib is such a fine program and the sib files can be used on both Mac and PC - why not turn it around and start a "hub". Why would a publisher give away files that have take time and money to prepare for free? Among publishers we share files in regarding reprints etc., but that's on another level than "public sharing". > Maybe you can go to Score Exchange, find the sheet music you like and contact the Author directly to obtain the relevant sib file. I guess todays 'file sharing' narrows down the interest. > At least I haven't find a website for this. ![]() But if you tell me a title I can for which I can sell the sib files 1000s times for 10 USD I'd engrave it for *free* for you :) As with the discussion about ePub and PDF, any such sib file would soon be in "public domain" and the originator would have made 30 USD on it. In the logical extreme it would equal to pay for an engraving, which is costly. It depends what you mean paying for them. sib files are hard to find, even paying for them. something one does not give away for free. Yes, and there you have to add 100s of hours of tuning. > It has all professional scores, but they are all scanned PDFs from the old published sheet music, so conversion into Sibelius for further editing must be done manually (i.e. But sometimes even a poor scan is better than none. XML is a fairly good format, but sib/mus files are better. > I don't see many other solutions, if one wants to modify the downloaded scores (maybe for fun). > However, that depends on the purpose for downloading the music. 7.0: finding classical music as sib.-files - fenrik, 28 Aug 08:24AM ![]()
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