In Overture, input of note data can be done by any of several methods: QWERTY keyboard, mouse, step entry MIDI keyboard recording, or real-time MIDI keyboard recording. Most notational symbols can be repositioned simply by dragging them with the mouse. Most other editing of notational symbols is performed by selecting the symbols using the mouse, and selecting the appropriate editing command from a menu or by clicking on a palette. MIDI data such as note durations and loudness are edited in a piano roll graphical view, which includes a bar graph allowing editing of the loudness of individual notes. Overture 5 and higher supports editing and page navigation using one's fingers or a stylus on touch screens.
Background and notability
In the early 1990s, the music notation software market was dominated by the Finale program, published by Coda. It was capable of handling large, complicated scores and non-traditional notation. However, its immense power and flexibility came at the expense of making it very difficult to learn to use. Other notation programs with different interfaces were eventually developed, including Encore, published by Passport Designs. It featured the ability to add notes by simply clicking on a staff; most notational elements could also be selected with the mouse. In 1994, Professor Alan Belkin of the University of Montreal published a study of notation software available at the time. Among other things, it described the advantages and disadvantages of the mouse- and keyboard-driven approaches to notation-interface design. appears in this MIDI editor view. The notes appear on a scrolling piano roll, and their durations and MIDI note velocities are editable using the mouse. When Overture was developed, it followed Encore's interface design. It was also the first music notation software that gave users control over all MIDI playback data such as note velocity, pitch bend and duration, utilizing a scrolling "piano roll" MIDI-editing view where notes could be moved and changed with the mouse. Overture was also one of the first music notation programs to always show the score in WYSIWYGpage view. Previous notation programs either lacked this, or switched between a scrolling editing view and a page view used for print previews or certain editing functions. As of 2017, Overture supports synchronized film/video playback, and plugins such as Garritan instrument libraries. In addition to its own file format, Overture supports files in the MusicXML format.
Publisher
Overture has been continuously maintained by the developer since it was first released. It was originally published by Opcode Systems. It was later published by Cakewalk. As of 2017, it is published by Sonic Scores, a company run by the author, in both boxed and downloadable versions. Score Writer, a less expensive version of Overture with reduced features, is also available. Demo versions of both packages are available at the Sonic Scores website. The demonstration versions are fully functional for a free 30 day trial period, after which, saving and printing are disabled.
Website
Support from the developer and the user community is provided via a support forum area on the website. Version release information on each update and beta versions are also available via the forum.