Difference between revisions of "About ABC Music Notation"

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(Add link to our ABC Sandbox)
 
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ABC notation is a shorthand form of musical notation. In basic form it uses the letters A through G to represent the given notes, with other elements used to place added value on these - sharp, flat, the length of the note, key, ornamentation. For more details, see the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ABC_notation Wikipedia ABC notation] page, and the [http://abcnotation.com ABC Music Notation] site.
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ABC notation is a shorthand form of musical notation. In basic form it uses the letters A through G to represent the pitch of notes, with other elements used to qualify these - octave, sharp/flat, the length of the note, key, ornamentation, barlines, repeats, etc. Header fields are used to give title, time signature, basic note length, key, etc. ABC  is widely used by folk musicians around the world to notate and share tunes and songs. There is a large online user community and a huge number of ABC tunes available on the web. One estimate is 50,000! Both Ray Mulligan and Dave Johnson (founding Bush Traditions Inc members) use ABC extensively. For more details, see the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ABC_notation Wikipedia ABC notation] page, and the [http://abcnotation.com ABC Music Notation] site.
  
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For example, here is a simple tune in abc notation:
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{{SERVER}}/images/abc_egtext.gif
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Which corresponds to, and can be used to create, the following visual score:
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{{SERVER}}/images/abc_egmus.jpg
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== Reference Material ==
 
For some introductory tutorials on this notation, you can start with:
 
For some introductory tutorials on this notation, you can start with:
 
* [http://abcnotation.com/learn learn abc page at abcnotation]
 
* [http://abcnotation.com/learn learn abc page at abcnotation]
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* [http://trillian.mit.edu/~jc/doc/doc/ABCprimer.html An ABC primer by John Chambers]
 
* [http://trillian.mit.edu/~jc/doc/doc/ABCprimer.html An ABC primer by John Chambers]
  
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Once you have an understanding of this notation, you may find the following references useful:
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* [http://www.stephenmerrony.co.uk/uploads/ABCquickRefv0_6.pdf ABC Quick Reference Card from Stephen Merrony Music]
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* [http://abcnotation.com/wiki/abc:standard:v2.1 The abc music standard 2.1 (Dec 2011)]
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* [http://trillian.mit.edu/~jc/music/abc/ABC-FAQ.html Frequently Asked Questions about ABC Music Notation by John Chambers]
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== Other Sites ==
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You can search various collections of and notated tunes at:
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* [http://abcnotation.com/search tune search at abcnotation] (including finding tunes on our site)
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* [http://trillian.mit.edu/~jc/cgi/abc/tunefind JC's ABC Tune Finder]
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* [http://tunearch.org/wiki/TTA Traditional Tune Archive]
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== Software ==
 
There is a wide range of software available, for most computer and mobile platforms, supporting this notation. One good list is [http://abcnotation.com/software ABC Music Notation Software] page. The creators of this site happily use [http://abc.stalikez.info/abcex.php/ ABCexplorer] (Windows),  [http://sourceforge.net/projects/easyabc/ EasyABC] (Linux, Mac, Windows) and [https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=nodeslight.tradmusician TradMusician] (Android). And this site relies on the [http://abcjs.net abcjs] javascript package to render its abc content.
 
There is a wide range of software available, for most computer and mobile platforms, supporting this notation. One good list is [http://abcnotation.com/software ABC Music Notation Software] page. The creators of this site happily use [http://abc.stalikez.info/abcex.php/ ABCexplorer] (Windows),  [http://sourceforge.net/projects/easyabc/ EasyABC] (Linux, Mac, Windows) and [https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=nodeslight.tradmusician TradMusician] (Android). And this site relies on the [http://abcjs.net abcjs] javascript package to render its abc content.
  
Or you can have a play with our [http://members.pcug.org.au/~lpb/tunes/local/abcjs_play.html ABC Sandbox].
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Or you can have a play with our [{{SERVER}}{{SCRIPTPATH}}/extensions/ABCjs/sandbox.html ABC sandbox].
  
 
[[Category:Support]]
 
[[Category:Support]]

Latest revision as of 13:33, 13 February 2017

ABC notation is a shorthand form of musical notation. In basic form it uses the letters A through G to represent the pitch of notes, with other elements used to qualify these - octave, sharp/flat, the length of the note, key, ornamentation, barlines, repeats, etc. Header fields are used to give title, time signature, basic note length, key, etc. ABC is widely used by folk musicians around the world to notate and share tunes and songs. There is a large online user community and a huge number of ABC tunes available on the web. One estimate is 50,000! Both Ray Mulligan and Dave Johnson (founding Bush Traditions Inc members) use ABC extensively. For more details, see the Wikipedia ABC notation page, and the ABC Music Notation site.

For example, here is a simple tune in abc notation:

abc_egtext.gif

Which corresponds to, and can be used to create, the following visual score:

abc_egmus.jpg

Reference Material

For some introductory tutorials on this notation, you can start with:

Once you have an understanding of this notation, you may find the following references useful:

Other Sites

You can search various collections of and notated tunes at:

Software

There is a wide range of software available, for most computer and mobile platforms, supporting this notation. One good list is ABC Music Notation Software page. The creators of this site happily use ABCexplorer (Windows), EasyABC (Linux, Mac, Windows) and TradMusician (Android). And this site relies on the abcjs javascript package to render its abc content.

Or you can have a play with our ABC sandbox.