Fonts - Technology Directory
- Available at: http://www.klemm-music.de/medieval/index.htm.
Rec #: 1201
- ChordSymbol [Macintosh/Windows]. Clevenger, John R.Santa Barbara, CA: Maestro Software50 S. Patterson Ave., #203, Santa Barbara, CA 93111, 805-964-7988, JClevESM@aol.com.
Rec #: 1199
Call Number: updated 2002; information provided by author and publisher
Abstract:
ChordSymbol font works perfectly in Sibelius and recent versions of Finale, and handles figured bass (while including a full complement of symbols needed for modern chordal analysis), is designed for use with the Lyrics tool in Finale.
- ChordSymbol v.1 and CSTimes v. 1 [Macintosh / IBM]. Clevinger, John R. Version Ver. 1. Rochester, NY: Maestro Software; 1996300 Alexander, Apt C-18, Rochester, NY 14607, 716-271-1578.
Rec #: 1145
Call Number: Updated 1998; information provided from flyer
Notes: Cost: $24.50; $94.50/15 copies, $144.50/25 copies, $194.50/40 copies
Abstract:
Music analysis fonts specifically designed by a music analyst for music analysts, ChordSymbol v.1 (a symbol font) and CSTimes v.1 (a text-font variant of ChordSymbol) allow you to weild chord symbols, accidentals , caeted scale degrees and a wide variety of ancillary markins in your computer-based music analysis work. The fonts can be used for analytical prose in word-processing applications, analytical illustrations or lead sheets in music notation applications, and computer-assisted instructional software in multimedia develpment applications. They can handle anything from figured bass through common-proactice analytical symbols to symbols for late nineteenth century chormatic harmony and beyond - even jazz. The fonts, which are sold together, are available in both TrueType and PostScript versions. Requests for custom symbols can be honored.
- Unicode Music Symbols [Web Page]. Available at: http://www.lib.virginia.edu/dmmc/Music/UnicodeMusic/.
Rec #: 1246
Call Number: updated 2002; information obtained from website
Abstract:
Contains proposal for Encoding Western Music Symbols in ISO/IEC 10646 by Perry Roland, and a link to Unicode chart