@inproceedings{Fober:15b,
title = {Distributing Music Scores to Mobile Platforms and to the Internet using INScore},
author = {Dominique Fober and Guillaume Gouilloux and Yann Orlarey and Stéphane Letz},
url = {inscore-web-SMC15.pdf},
year = {2015},
date = {2015-07-30},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the Sound and Music Computing conference — SMC’15},
pages = {229–233},
abstract = {Music notation is facing new musical forms such as electronic and/or interactive music, live coding, hybridizations with dance, design, multimedia. It is also facing the migration of musical instruments to gestural and mobile platforms, which poses the question of new scores usages on devices that mostly lack the necessary graphic space to display the music in a traditional setting and approach. Music scores distributed and shared on the Internet start also to be the support of innovative musical practices, which raises other issues, notably regarding dynamic and collaborative music scores. This paper introduces some of the perspectives opened by the migration of music scores to mobile platforms and to the Internet and it presents the approach adopted with INScore, an environment for the design of augmented, interactive music scores.},
keywords = {graphic, programming, score, web music},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Music notation is facing new musical forms such as electronic and/or interactive music, live coding, hybridizations with dance, design, multimedia. It is also facing the migration of musical instruments to gestural and mobile platforms, which poses the question of new scores usages on devices that mostly lack the necessary graphic space to display the music in a traditional setting and approach. Music scores distributed and shared on the Internet start also to be the support of innovative musical practices, which raises other issues, notably regarding dynamic and collaborative music scores. This paper introduces some of the perspectives opened by the migration of music scores to mobile platforms and to the Internet and it presents the approach adopted with INScore, an environment for the design of augmented, interactive music scores.