"Modified Version" refers to any derivative made by adding to, deleting, "Original Version" refers to the collection of Font Software components as "Reserved Font Name" refers to any names specified as such after the Include source files, build scripts and documentation. Holder(s) under this license and clearly marked as such. "Font Software" refers to the set of files released by the Copyright To any document created using the fonts or their derivatives. Requirement for fonts to remain under this license does not apply However, cannot be released under any other type of license. Redistributed and/or sold with any software provided that any reserved Theįonts, including any derivative works, can be bundled, embedded, Redistributed freely as long as they are not sold by themselves. The OFL allows the licensed fonts to be used, studied, modified and Open framework in which fonts may be shared and improved in partnership The goals of the Open Font License (OFL) are to stimulate worldwideĭevelopment of collaborative font projects, to support the font creationĮfforts of academic and linguistic communities, and to provide a free and SIL OPEN FONT LICENSE Version 1.1 - 26 February 2007 You can find more information about LilyPond and download its source code at The feta font is licensed under the Open Font License, which reads as follows: The Feta font glyphs that Aerodrums uses to render and output the music was developed by the LilyPond project. Here you can find information about who wrote them, where to find them, and the licenses under which they are released. I’ve been trying to find a good tool to create drum-specific sheet music on my Mac, and have largely been frustrated.Aered uses a number of software libraries to do its work. Expensive tools that do it all like Finale and Sibelius are just too heavyweight, both require lots of of tweaks to work well for drums, and felt a bit clumsy to me just because of their level of complexity. MuseScore looked great but the editing workflow just frustrated me, trying to get multiple voices in one stave (required when you have to chart up to 4 notes at a time in one place, because drummers have 4 limbs )) was far too fiddly and resulted in many annoying round-trips. Finale Notepad was almost the tool I needed, except that it refuses to properly annotate open/closed hi hats which makes it completely useless in practice (in the full Finale you can customise the notation to do it, but why do you have to?). In the end I found Lilypond, and it’s wonderful. Not only does it support the full set of drum notation, it’s also based on text markup, making it a lot like LaTeX, which as a programmer is just perfect. Everything can be expressed as a nested syntax, copy & pasted easily, wrapped in repeats and context-specific tweaks when you need them, and I can version the whole thing in a git repository when I refine my tracks. However, I did find that the default notation that Lilypond uses for drums was different to what I was used to. There’s no one standard notation, but the one I always use (and encounter most in places like Online Drummer and Rhythm magazine) is as denoted here. Conversely Lilypond seems to default to what Wikipedia says, which is just a weird version (to me). So the first thing I did was customise that - luckily being programmer-friendly Lilypond lets you alter most things using include files, which I used to shift the notation the way I wanted. Here’s my current standard include file, which in addition to making the notation ‘standard’ as per my experience, but also defines a useful macro ‘\flam’ which lets you create flams really quickly. I could talk about all the cool things it supports really easily, like repeat segments with alternate endings, vocal part overlays, smart auto-layout and more. But instead, I thought I’d just share what I created today in just a few hours despite only finding Lilypond yesterday. I’ve created a public git repository with my first attempt at a full song score (pull requests welcome if you think you can improve it :)), which is Tick Tick Boom by The Hives. I want to play this but I couldn’t find a proper score for it, and I like to read a score when I’m practicing.
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