I started out using Sibelius many years ago and thought it was fine for my purposes. Then I swapped to Finale and although it had a steeper learning curve I preferred it because it felt more flexible. I just recently bought Dorico and although there are many features I want that haven't yet been implemented I think it is by far the best notation out of the three. It's much quicker to use and better organised and has a tone of great features that I always wished for in Finale. Another great thing about Dorico is that you can edit the midi performance without affecting the score.
Just started working with Sibelius today. Watched first 8 minutes of a getting started video (1 of 6 videos for newcomers). Then got impatient and decided to try to figure myself. I am able to put in 3 voices for the 3 voice fugue, but I keep needing to flip stem directions. And then it keeps adding rests as if I wrote a 4 voice fugue. I keep deleting the rests and it keeps adding them back in. Other than that it's going good. Lesson learned: I will watch all of the 6 videos so I know what I'm doing before I do anymore work.
… all I need do now is create my MP3. I can do it with cheap video game sounding piano now but I want to work on this to have nice sound. If the piano sound is not good, then I will consider Dorico.
Here you go. This is the raw import from Sibelius to Dorico. I made zero adjustments. Obviously there are going to be a few mistakes and differences just because of the differences between how Dorico and Sibelius interpret the musicxml information but you can see just how much cleaner the Dorico scores are without needing to do anything.I've also attached an MP3 exported straight from Dorico (default piano sound).
The Pro version has an option to adjust the beat stresses but unfortunately the lite version doesn't.
I still question the Dorico decision to only offer RANDOM ACCENTS in the piano sound in their lite version!?!?!?!?!?! Who plays like this?? Maybe a bad player. If so, why not add some goofy changes in tempo, faulty rhythm, wrong notes, etc?
The accents aren't random. My guess is that what you are hearing is where the same note is played in two voices simultaneously. The note will sound louder in these cases because you are hearing two of them.
I can't hear it. Please upload the PDF.
Hahaha, my mistake. Actually there is a "humanize" feature I wasn't aware of. This does indeed produce random dynamics (the amount of which is adjustable.)
Here is another mp3 with no humanization and using pianoteq instead of the default piano sound.
As per your request, a fully humanized interpretation;
Here you go.The human performance was essentially a matter of setting all the humanize setting to 100% then randomly shifting some of the notes up or down a step and forward or back, then drawing random lines in the tempo track. I really didn't think about it too much. I also slightly de-tuned the piano (not sure if you noticed that.)
Though I do compose a lot I don't really have the time for your contest. Sorry. Too many other projects happening at the moment.