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Music binder pro
Music binder pro













music binder pro
  1. #Music binder pro pro
  2. #Music binder pro plus

Now, with the iPad I can use the Apple Pencil to write in fingerings and just carry the iPad. I typically transfer my fingerings to the study score, then I carry around the smaller score. Personally, I like learning music with a full-size (printed) score, then using smaller study editions once I’ve learned a piece. In summary, if you can read a study score or pocket score edition from various music publishers, you can just as easily read sheet music on the 9.7" iPad, if not more easily. You can even reduce the margins and make the music notation much bigger, even compared to the printed score: Once you set the margins to something more typical, you can see that the digital edition and the printed study edition are basically the same size.

music binder pro

You can change this in the score settings by selecting “custom layout.” Then you can adjust both the margins and the spacing between staves. If you use the Henle app’s default printed layout, for some reason the margins are huge. 1) in the Henle app placed next to the same piece in their study score edition: Henle incidentally also has an app called Henle Library for their sheet music, which you can now purchase digitally.

#Music binder pro plus

When you compare the margins of Henle’s study scores with the bezel of the 9.7" iPad plus the margins of a score on the screen, the music appears at about the same size. You can barely see the corners of the print edition, showing that it’s the same size as the 9.7" iPad. Here is the 9.7" iPad on top of a Henle study score: The 9.7" model is exactly the same size as Henle’s study score editions – to the millimeter, in fact: I expected the difference to be much bigger. It turns out there’s really not much difference in size between the 9.7“ and 10.5” models as far as sheet music is concerned. I compared the two mid-sized models side by side to get an idea of how they perform for musicians, especially for sheet music.

#Music binder pro pro

My own current model is the 9.7“ Pro from 2016, which has just been supplanted by the 10.5” model in Apple’s lineup. (Screen sizes are measured diagonally as a standard.) Rumor has it that the iPad Mini will be phased out now that iPhones have very large screens also, they’re too small to be all that useful for sheet music. With the introduction of a new 10.5“ model, iPads now come in four sizes: the iPad Mini with a 7.9” screen, the “standard” iPad at 9.7“, and two iPad Pro models, with 10.5” and 12.9" displays. Is it finally time to embrace technology fully and go all-digital? Here is one musician’s perspective on the iPad as a digital sheet music reader. For several years, I’ve kept a digital score library on an iPad to supplement the traditional paper scores I use for learning and practicing.

music binder pro

Digital sheet music has come a very long way since the awkward initial attempts to turn laptops into contortionists a few daring musicians hoped would miraculously stay on a music stand.















Music binder pro